Weeks v. Berschauer

36 P.2d 81, 140 Kan. 244, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 6, 1934
DocketNo. 31,605
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 81 (Weeks v. Berschauer) 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
Weeks v. Berschauer, 36 P.2d 81, 140 Kan. 244, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 45 (kan 1934).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This was an action to cancel a contract and deed which purported to convey plaintiff’s interest in certain lands in Trego county and to quiet his claim of title thereto.

It appears that in 1923 the late Lee C. Weeks was the owner of 800 acres of land in Trego county. In September of that year he mortgaged the land to the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank to secure a loan of $11,500, evidenced by a promissory note payable in 66 semiannual instalments.

[245]*245On November 20, 1924, Lee C. Weeks died testate, leaving a widow, Jessie Weeks, and five children, one of whom is this plaintiff. By the terms of his will all the testator’s property was bequeathed to Jessie, “to be hers absolutely so long as she remains my widow, [and] at the expiration of such time . . . the residue [shall] be equally distributed-to my heirs, each to receive an equal portion.”

In 1927 Jessie Weeks mortgaged her interest in the 800 acres to W. E. Baer to secure her promissory note to him for $1,800.

At the time of his father’s death this plaintiff was a minor and did not attain his majority until October 4, 1929. However, during his minority and for some reason not disclosed by the record, he and his mother executed to somebody two promissory notes for $350 and $550, which were acquired by the Trego County State Bank. On December 28, 1927, that bank commenced suit in the county court of Trego county to recover on these two notes and caused an attachment to be issued and levied on the interests of the defendant mother and minor son in the 800 acres. A guardian ad litem was appointed for the minor, and an answer was filed in his behalf. Judgment was entered in favor of the bank on March 22, 1928, against this plaintiff and his mother for $992.97 and costs, and their interests in the land were ordered sold. Accordingly order of sale was issued on April 14, 1928, and the sheriff’s return, dated May 21, 1928, recited that he had sold their interests to J. J. [Jacob] Berschauer for $710.88. This sale was confirmed, and a certificate of purchase dated May 23, 1928, was executed to Berschauer entitling him to a deed in 18 months unless the property were redeemed in the interval. Pursuant thereto a sheriff’s deed was executed to him on November 27, 1931.

On January 20, 1928, Jessie Weeks and her five children made a written agreement with R. C. Buxton to exchange this much-encumbered 800 acres, which was also burdened with delinquent taxes, for a certain duplex property in Kansas City, Mo., which was itself encumbered with a deed of trust for $6,000 and past-due interest and taxes. This contract provided that the instruments evidencing this exchange of properties should be made through the First State Bank of Ransom. The plaintiff, Carl E. Weeks, signed this contract and joined with his mother and his brothers and sister in executing the deed carrying this contract.into effect; but [246]*246he was then only 19 years of age and Buxton was aware of that fact.

At the time the contract of exchange of properties was made, Buxton’s Kansas City property stood in the name of one Hinshaw and wife. Hinshaw had agreed to exchange the Kansas City property to Buxton for a half section of mortgaged land in Ness county. Hinshaw and wife executed a warranty deed to the Kansas City property in blank and sent it to the bank in Ransom, with instructions to deliver it to Buxton. On March 13, 1928, Jessie Weeks and her five children authorized the bank at Ransom to deliver the deed to Chas. E. Rutherford, a Kansas City real-estate dealer.

On March 20, 1928, Jessie Weeks made a contract with the owner of a half section of mortgaged land in Otero county, Colorado, to exchange the Kansas City duplex property therefor, and directed Rutherford to surrender the deed, abstract and insurance policy on the Kansas City duplex to the Colorado party with whom this latest exchange of properties had been effected. In the deed conveying the interest to the Colorado land the name of the grantee was omitted, and the plaintiff, Carl E. Weeks, did not participate in the Colorado land trade nor consent thereto.

On February 3, 1928, W. F. Baer, who held the mortgage on Jessie Weeks’ interest in the 800 acres of Trego county land, redeemed the land from tax sale for the delinquent taxes of 1926, $239.64. He also paid the 1927 taxes, $233.89. About the same time Baer paid the overdue instalments of principal and interest on the original mortgage indebtedness covering the 800 acres, $402.-50, held by the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank.

On February 8, 1928, Buxton and wife conveyed the 800 acres to Jacob Bersehauer, subject to the land bank’s first mortgage and subject, also, to the mortgage executed by Jessie Weeks in favor of W- F. Baer. Bersehauer went into possession in August, 1928, and later paid off the first mortgage and acquired the second mortgage by assignment.

The foregoing is an abridged summary of the most material of the trial court’s exhaustive findings of fact. Other details are that in 1929 Bersehauer executed an oil and gas lease on part of the property, and in 1930 he made an abortive contract to sell the 800 acres on the “wheat plan,” but these facts are of no present; importance.

On March 19, 1931, this plaintiff, having attained his majority [247]*247on October 4, 1929, served notice on the Trego County State Bank that he disaffirmed the execution of the notes for $350 and $550 which had been the basis of its action against him and his mother, and in which the Trego county land had been attached and sold to Berschauer. On the same day he instituted proceedings in the county court to open the judgment rendered against him on March 22, 1928. No notice of these proceedings was given to Berschauer. The county court vacated its judgment and allowed this plaintiff to file an answer; and eventually, on September 14, 1931, judgment was rendered in his favor against the Trego County State Bank, which had instituted that suit against him and his mother in 1927 and on which the vacated judgment of March 22, 1928, had been rendered.

On August 22, 1931, plaintiff disaffirmed the contract of January 20, 1928, in which he had joined with his mother, brothers and sister to exchange the 800 acres in Trego county for the Kansas City duplex, and notified Berschauer, Buxton, the Ransom bank and W. E. Baer to that effect.

Jessie Weeks, to whom the 800 acres was devised “during her widowhood,” never remarried, and in 1932, when this action was tried, she was 64 years old. Any other material facts which may require attention will be noted as we proceed.

Judgment was entered in favor of Berschauer, and his title was quieted against plaintiff.

Plaintiff appeals, urging various points of law and fact which, he contends, should have resulted in a judgment in his favor. The first proposition he urges is that, when he became of age no property remained in his possession or under his control which he had received in consideration for the conveyance of his interest in the 800 acres. He directs attention to the fact that the trial court found that he did not participate in the exchange of the Kansas City duplex for the Colorado land. However, that merely means that he still has an interest in the Kansas City duplex property, and he made no tender of that interest to Berschauer nor to Buxton, from whom he received it.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.2d 81, 140 Kan. 244, 1934 Kan. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weeks-v-berschauer-kan-1934.