Wert v. Phillips

193 P.2d 253, 165 Kan. 49, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1948
DocketNo. 37,024; No. 37,023
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 253 (Wert v. Phillips) 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
Wert v. Phillips, 193 P.2d 253, 165 Kan. 49, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 301 (kan 1948).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The principal question involved in these appeals is whether an alleged oral contract with deceased parties was established by evidence which should have been regarded as clear and satisfactory as a matter of law. The trial court ruled that the evidence was insufficient to support any contract. The appellant contends that such court either decided the case upon an incorrect conception of the law or acted arbitrarily in refusing to follow all of the adequate competent evidence introduced.

The two cases were consolidated for trial and also upon appeal. No controversy develops as to the propriety of the consolidation but by way of general explanation, the following facts should be stated. J. E. Wert and his wife, Lizzie Wert, had a son named Calvin Wert and another son named Kenneth Wert. Calvin Wert married the appellant, Mildred Wert, in June, 1924, and they lived together as husband and wife until Calvin Wert died on November 27, 1926, as a result of injuries he received in an accident while hunting. He left surviving him as his sole and only heir the appellant, Mildred Wert. The appellant asserts that on the day before Calvin’s death, an oral contract was entered into between Calvin’s parents and the appellant, which contract, in substance, provided that the appellant should receive the share of Calvin Wert in the estate which his parents owned in the event of Calvin’s death prior to the death of his parents upon the condition that the appellant would remain single until the death of both parents and would continue to treat them with the same respect and render the same service to them which she had given to them during the time she had been the wife of Calvin Wert. The parties agree that J. E. Wert died on November 21,1936, leaving a will which he had executed in February, 1927, and which contained provisions that were clearly contrary to the alleged oral agreement. His will was admitted to probate and the administration of his estate was closed. The appellant did not assert any claim against the estate of J. E. Wert because, according to her contention, she was not entitled to any part of the assets of [51]*51his estate until after the death of Lizzie Wert also occurred. Lizzie Wert lived until December, 1944, at which time she died intestate. The appellant filed a claim against her estate based upon the alleged contract between the appellant and the deceased parents of her deceased husband, Calvin Wert. The claim was denied by the probate court and appeal followed to the district court. The case which was appealed from the probate court to the district court is action No. 37,024 in this court. W. S. Phillips is the administrator of the estate of Lizzie Wert. Kenneth Wert, the other son of the parents, became incompetent and on February 4, 1929, the same W. S'. Phillips was appointed guardian of the person and the estate of Kenneth Wert. As a consequence, after the death of Lizzie Wert the appellant brought an action in the district court, based upon the same alleged oral contract, against Kenneth Wert and W. S. Phillips as his guardian. Such action is appeal No. 37,023 in this court. Upon the consolidated trials of the two cases, the same evidence was introduced in support of both cases. Upon appeal, the same questions arise in both cases and for practical purposes they may be regarded as one case. As before stated, the appellant contends that her right to recover was established by clear and convincing evidence, and that the trial court either decided the cases upon an incorrect theory of law or acted arbitrarily and capriciously in holding contrary to all of the competent evidence introduced in the cases. In order to consider such contention upon its merits, we necessarily must review all of the evidence in the cases which is germane to the problem presented.

The appellant was disqualified from testifying in her own behalf in regard to any conversations she had with the deceased parties, under our statute G. S. 1935, 60-2804. Her sister, Cora McDaniel, testified that she was present in the hospital on November 26, 1926, at the time a bedside conversation arose among Calvin Wert, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Wert and the appellant, and heard Calvin say to his mother and father, “If anything happens to me you will leave her my share of the estate when you are through with it?” and that Mrs. Wert said, “Yes, son, but nothing will happen to you,” and Calvin said, “I don’t know.” Thereafter Mrs. Wert said, “Calvin, if Mildred is still our daughter-in-law as long as we live, and she remains single, and if Mildred still remains our daughter-in-law, we will promise you we will leave her your part of the estate when we are through with it.” Whereupon Calvin turned [52]*52to his wife and said, “Mildred, they have promised, Dad and Mother have promised to leave you my share of the estate. Will you promise them that you will never remarry as long as they are alive, if they promise they will leave you my share of the estate, if you will stay unmarried?” In answer to the question, Mildred said, “I promise.” The witness further testified that Mr. and Mrs. Wert both said, “ 'If she is as good in the future as she has been in the past’ they would leave his [Calvin’s] share of the estate to her later on.” Calvin died the next day. The witness also testified to many conversations she had with Mr. and Mrs. Wert after Calvin’s death in which the deceased parties confirmed their agreement, but the corroborating conversations will be discussed later in the opinion. We note, in passing, that Cora McDaniel was testifying in behalf of her sister. Consequently, the trial court may have thought she was prejudiced and may not have given much, if any, weight to her testimony. It may be noted, also, that in cross-examination a transcript of the testimony the witness had given in the probate court was introduced, from which it is argued that in the probate court the witness testified to the effect that Mildred promised the parties at the bedside conversation she would “never remarry” instead of saying that she would not remarry as long as Mr. and Mrs. Wert lived. An explanation of the variance develops in the record but we do not consider that it requires elaboration for present purposes. If the testimony of Cora McDaniel were the only testimony as to the bedside conversation, this court would have no hesitancy in holding that' the district court was not required to accept her testimony as sufficient evidence of the alleged contract. However, other witnesses to the conversation testified.

Lois Taggart testified that he was present in the hospital the night before Calvin died and heard a conversation among Calvin Wert, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Wert and the appellant, in which Calvin asked his parents, “Well, if anything happens, will you leave Mildred my share of the estate if she doesn’t remarry?” Mr. and Mrs. Wert said they would, and that thereupon Mildred said she would not remarry. Another witness, George W. Cuddy, also heard the bedside conversation. He testified that he knew Calvin Wert and learned of the hunting accident which caused his death, and that on the afternoon of the accident he heard that it might be necessary to give Calvin Wert a blood transfusion. As a consequence, he went to the hospital that evening and was present when a bedside [53]*53conversation occurred among the parties herein named.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 253, 165 Kan. 49, 1948 Kan. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wert-v-phillips-kan-1948.