Weitz v. Moulden

1925 OK 118, 234 P. 583, 109 Okla. 119, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 699
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 10, 1925
Docket13266
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1925 OK 118 (Weitz v. Moulden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weitz v. Moulden, 1925 OK 118, 234 P. 583, 109 Okla. 119, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 699 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This action was commenced in -the district court of Blaine county, Okla., by Katherine A. Moulden, Amelia Wilkinson, August H. Weitz, Mary A. Norcross, George A. Granot, and Frank B. Granot, minors, by their next friend, Mary A. Norcross, defendants in error, plaintiffs below, against John P. Weitz, plaintiff in error, Jacob Meier and the Aetna Life Insurance Company, all defendants below, defendants in error claiming to be the heirs of Philip Weitz, deceased, and entitled to a four-fifths’ interest in his estate, which consisted of both real and personal property in the hands of their brother, John P. Weitz, who claimed the same as his o'wta as a gift from Philip Weitz, to set aside a deed to a portion of the real estate, to set aside a mortgage made by John P. Weitz to the Aetna Life Insurance Company, to set aside a deed made to Jacob Meier, for an accounting and an injunction, restraining John P. Weitz from disposing of the property during the pendency of the action, and for an order of court to turn over the funds, belonging to the estate of Philip Weitz in the hands of John P. Weitz, and for costs to the court.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiffs and defendants in 'this opinion as they appeared in the lower court.

The petition, among other things, alleged that Katherine A. Moulden, Amelia Wilkinson, August II. Weitz, -and John P. Weitz were the children of Philip Weitz, deceased, and that Mary A. Norcross, George A. Granot, and Frank B. Granot were his grandchildren, being children of a deceased daughter of Pnilip Weitz, and that the parties named were the sole and only heirs of Philip Weitz, deceased, and sought to recover their interest in said estate, which amounted to a four-fifths’ interest, from John P. Weitz, who, they claim, was in possession of the *120 real estate and personal property and had collected the rents and profits from the real estate, and was indebted to Philip Weitz, at the time of his death, for money borrowed and rents and money collected, and that the said defendant John P. Weitz had obtained possession of all the estate of Philip Weitz through fraud and undue influence exercised upon his father, and that the said John P. Weitz had obtained a deed io certain of the real estate to be executed in blank by Philip Weitz before his death, and that he had fraudulently inserted his name as grantee therein, and asked that they be declared to be entitled to a four-fifths’ undivided Merest in all the real and personal property of the estate of Philip Weitz, and that the defendant John P. Weitz be declared to be entitled to the other one-fifth undivided interest therein; that a mortgage for $2,000, given by John P. Weitz upon a portion of the real estate to the Aetna Life Insurance Company should be canceled, and that the deed held by defendant John P. Weitz against certain real estate should be canceled, and that a deed held by Jacob Meier upon certain other real estate should be canceled; that Philip Weitz made and executed a will, but that after the execution of the will he sold and disposed of a portion of the property mentioned in the Will, and that the principal devisee in the will, who was his wife, died after the execution of the will and before the death of the said Philip Weitz, and that the act of Philip Weitz in disposing of a portion of the property, devised in the will, in effect, revoked the terms of the will and codicil thereto, and prayed that they have a personal judgment against the defendant John P. Weitz for their four-fifths’ Merest in the entire estate of Philip Weitz and be decreed a four-fifths’ interest in all the assets of the estate of Philip Weitz, in the hands of John P. Weitz; that he be made to account and pay into court all monies had and received by him, belonging to said estate; that the mortgage held aj the Aetna Life Insurance Company be canceled and held for naught, but if not canceled, that they have a personal judgment against the defendant, John P. Weitz, for the $2,000 received and used by him as proceeds of said mortgage, together with interest on all funds, and for their costs.

The defendant John P. Weitz answered by way of a general denial, and set up as an independent defense that he was the owner of all the property, belonging to the estate of Philip Weitz, by gift from his father before his death under an' agreement that he was to take care of and support his father during his lifetime; that the same was given to him voluntarily by the said Philip Weitz, and that the said defendant performed all the conditions of said gift on his part; that he admitted that, after the death of his mother, Katy Weitz, his father changed his mind in regard to the will, insofar as the property was concerned, by giving it outright to the defendant, and prayed that the plaintiffs take nothing under their petition, and that the title to the property be quieted in him, and for such other and 'further relief as the court might find to be proper and just.

The plaintiffs filed reply by way of a general denial and denied that there was any sale or transfer from Philip Weitz to the defendant John' P. Weitz of the property described in the petition, and alleged that, if there were any sale or transfer of the property, there was no consideration passed from the defendant to .the deceased, and that there was never any delivery of said property, or any part thereof, by the deceased to the defendant; that, if there were any agreement between them for the care and keeping of deceased, during his lifetime, the same was obtained by and through undue influence, used and exercised over the deceased, and by fraud practiced upon the deceased to obtain the property; that the value of deceased’s property was between $16,000 and $18,000, and far in. excess of all the property owtoed by defendant, and that the income from said property was more than sufficient to keep .and take care of deceased the remainder of his life, he being then 71 years of age; tha/ the deed, claimed to have been executed by deceased to the defendant, was without consideration; that defendant did not .take care of the deceased, but that his expenses were paid out of his own funds; and denied that there was ever any gift made by the deceased to the defendant.

Upon these issues the cause was tried to the court, without the intervention of a jury, and, at the close of all the testimony in the case, the court took the same under advisement and found against the plaintiffs in favor of the Aetna Life Insurance Company for the amount of its mortgage and $200 attorney fees, and gave it a lien against the real estate, described in the mortgage, also found against the plaintiffs and in favor of Jacob Meier for the title to the lands,' conveyed to him, and found that the plaintiffs were entitled to a four-fifths’ interest in the estate of Philip Weitz, deceased, awarding Katherine A. Moulden, Amelia Wilkinson and August H. Weitz and the defendant, John P. Weitz, each a one-fifth interest, and Mary A. Norcross, George A. Granof, and Prank B. Granot, the grand *121 children, each a one-fifth interest, as the sole and only heirs of Philip "Weitz, deceased ; that the deceased, on the 16th day of June, 1919, made, executed, and delivered to the defendant, John P. Weitz, in escrow, a deed to lots 15 and 16, in block 8, in the town of Hitchcock, in favor of the plaintiff, August H. Weitz. to 'be delivered to him after his death; that same had never been delivered and ordered the same delivered to Katherine A. Moulden, as guardian of August H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 118, 234 P. 583, 109 Okla. 119, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weitz-v-moulden-okla-1925.