Webster v. Toland

79 P.2d 884, 148 Kan. 36, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 1938
DocketNo. 33,722
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 884 (Webster v. Toland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webster v. Toland, 79 P.2d 884, 148 Kan. 36, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 137 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, C. J.:

This was an action to set aside a family settlement, to cancel certain instruments executed pursuant thereto, and for equitable relief. Defendants’ demurrer to evidence was sustained, and plaintiffs appeal.

The controlling facts were these: The late Charles Toland, of Pratt county, died intestate on November 14, 1934, leaving a wife, Belle Toland, and two sons, Henry and Roy, and four daughters, Fannie, Eula, Mary and Ruth. All the children had grown up and all the daughters were married.

Although Charles could neither read nor write, he had accumulated a sizeable fortune in lands in Pratt and Seward counties, and also a section of land in Yuma county, Colorado.

In 1913 the plaintiff, Fannie Toland, married Clark Webster, a farmer, and they resided on rented lands for some years. In 1918 [37]*37Clark Webster entered into an oral agreement with his father-in-law, Charles Toland, for the purchase of 240 acres of land at an agreed price of $13,500, with 6 percent interest. Webster paid $2,000 in cash on the agreed price and took possession of the land, and he and his wife have resided thereon since then. Title remained in Charles Toland until his death. How much Webster owed on the property at that time was not determined, but Webster testified that it was $2,500.

Following the'death of Charles, his widow qualified as administratrix, and filed an inventory of the value of the estate summarized thus:

(1) Total value of all goods and chattels......................... $6,879.00
(2) Total value of all bonds, mtges., notes and other securities..... 9,000.00
(3) Total value of all debts and accounts......................... 150.00
(4) Total value of all moneys, bank bills, and other circulating medium ................................................................
(5) Total value of all real estate (Pratt Co. lands)................ 59,500.00
Total appraised value of all property...................... $75,529.00

Later a supplemental inventory was filed, covering lands in Seward county, Kansas, and Yuma county, Colorado, appraised at $18,400; and one covering miscellaneous bonds, notes, etc., listed at $2,200. The aggregate of these amounts is $96,129, which for the purposes of this appeal will have to serve as a rough approximation of the value of the Charles Toland estate. There was no finding of its net value, nor evidence in the record on which a precise computation thereof can be made. We note that two quarter sections of the Toland lands in Seward county were covered by a mortgage lien for $2,926.90.

Some weeks after the death of Charles Toland all the parties to this lawsuit effected a family settlement whereby the administratrix canceled whatever indebtedness was owed by Clark Webster on the •farm he had orally purchased from the intestate some 18 years previously. The widow and her two sons and her other three daughters and their spouses executed a deed to Clark and Fannie Webster conveying to them the 240 acres which they occupied. At the same time Fannie Webster and her husband executed to her mother and to her two brothers and three sisters an instrument designated “Assignment and Deed,” in which they relinquished all their interest in the estate of Charles Toland and particularly describing all the lands of that estate in Pratt and Seward counties and in Yuma county, [38]*38Colorado. This instrument contained all the essentials of a deed of conveyance. All three of the instruments were dated December 27, 1934.

On December 1,1936, plaintiffs commenced this action against the defendants, alleging that at the time the family settlement was made and the instruments executed as narrated above, they had no knowledge or information of the value and extent of the estate of Charles Toland, but that such information was in the possession of Belle Toland and her sons Henry and Roy Toland; that they represented to plaintiffs that they did not know the extent and value of the estate, and that there would not be sufficient assets aside from the real estate to pay the taxes on the lands and the costs of administration, and that the estate consisted almost exclusively of real estate of the approximate value of $86,000.

Plaintiffs alleged that they believed and relied on the representations of the defendant mother and her sons; that those representations were not true, and known to defendants to be untrue; that defendants did know that the value and extent of the estate “was a great deal more than the sum of $86,000, and that they well knew;” and that defendants Henry and Roy Toland were indebted to the estate “in the sum of several thousand dollars,” and that such debts “were intentionally omitted from said pretended inventory;” and that defendants concealed the foregoing alleged facts from plaintiff Fannie Webster, for the purpose of making a settlement for her share of the estate for a small proportion of its value, and- — -

“That plaintiffs would not have entered into such pretended settlement except for such inducements, misrepresentations and concealments, and in their confidence that the said three defendants would deal justly and fairly with them.”

The prayer of plaintiffs’ petition was for cancellation of the instruments executed to effect the family settlement, and that plaintiff Fannie Webster be adjudged to be the owner of a one-twelfth interest of the Charles Toland estate and for other equitable relief.

To this petition an answer was filed by the mother, her two sons and by her daughters, Mary and Ruth, defendants herein. It contained certain general and special denials and admissions, and alleged that Charles Toland in his lifetime had made advancements to certain of defendants — to Henry Toland, $6,000; to Roy Toland, $2,200; and to their sister, Ruth Bales, $2,322, all of which sums they admitted were proper charges against their distributive shares [39]*39of the estate. Their answer also contained a detailed and categorical denial of every allegation in plaintiffs’ petition which directly or inferentially charged the commission of fraud by them or any of them in effecting the family settlement.

Defendants also alleged that in that settlement an indebtedness of Clark Webster in the sum of $15,580 as the balance of the principal and interest due from him to the estate on the purchase price of the farm occupied by plaintiffs was remitted'.

Defendants further answered that since the family settlement was effected, plaintiffs had received rents, issues and profits on the land conveyed to them by defendants, and had altered the gas and oil lease thereon so that the delay rentals should be paid to them and were so paid; and furthermore — ■

“14. That on the 25th day of April, 1936, the plaintiffs did mortgage said lands so received by them, together with other lands, t.o the Iuka State Bank of Iuka, Kansas, in the principal sum of $9,000, which mortgage was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Pratt county, Kansas, in book 79, at page 283 of the mortgage records of said office.
“15.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 884, 148 Kan. 36, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webster-v-toland-kan-1938.