Wetzel v. Wetzel

204 P.2d 768, 167 Kan. 6, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1949
DocketNo. 37,437
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 204 P.2d 768 (Wetzel v. Wetzel) 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
Wetzel v. Wetzel, 204 P.2d 768, 167 Kan. 6, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 263 (kan 1949).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This was an action wherein the plaintiffs sought to adjudicate the title to real estate. Judgment was for defendants, dismissing the petition. The plaintiffs have appealed.

In the interest of clarity a statement as to parties will be made at the outset. The story starts with the death of Frank Wetzel about June 2, 1937. At the time of his death intestate he owned a quarter section, which was the homestead of himself and his wife, Fannie. They also owned an eighty as tenants in common. He left as his heirs his widow, Fannie, and six children. Thus Fannie inherited an undivided one-half of the quarter and each of the children an undivided one-twelfth. As to the eighty, Fannie owned twelve twenty-fourths and inherited six twenty-fourths, thus she owned eighteen twenty-fourths and each of the children one twenty-fourth. The children are Mabel Goes, Faye Blair, Maude Brooks, Harry 0. Wetzel, Glenn Wetzel and Guy Wetzel. This litigation is between Glenn, Faye, Maude and Sarah, plaintiffs, and Guy, [7]*7Harry and Mabel, defendants, Harry being on one side apparently and his wife Sarah on the other. After the formal allegations, the petition set out the above facts as to the interests of the parties. It then alleged the death of Fannie, the mother, on May 4, 1945, and that shortly after the death of Frank Wetzel on June 8, 1937, Guy made an oral proposal to Harry, Mabel and Bertha and their spouses, in substance that all of the children would join in a quitclaim deed to all the real estate to their mother Fannie, conveying to her a life estate in all of it, so that she would always have a home and upon her death all of it would belong to the six children and be divided equally among them; and that later he made the same proposal to Maude and her spouse; that this proposal was accepted by all of them and Guy stated- he would prepare a quitclaim deed accordingly; that he did prepare such a deed and presented it to each of the children and it was executed and acknowledged by each of- them and their respective spouses, after Guy had again explained the agreement to them; that the deed was delivered to Fannie and recorded by her. The petition then alleged that Fannie had full knowledge of the proposal and knew that the children had agreed to give her a life estate only and that upon her death all of the 240 acres would become the property in fee simple of the children in equal shares; that she paid no consideration for the quitclaim deed and the conveyances by the children of their interest in the real estate, pursuant to the oral contract, was for her benefit, and she accepted the quitclaim deed, subject to the oral contract, and it was a binding contract upon her and upon the children, and she knew she had only a life estate in all of the real estate; that after the delivery of the quitclaim deed to Fannie and about April 14, 1938, in violation of the contract and without the consent of the other children Guy obtained from Fannie a warranty deed conveying to him the entire quarter section and an undivided three-fourths of the eighty and that after the death of Fannie, Guy claimed and was then claiming all of the real estate, by which claim the other children were denied their share, pursuant to the contract; that the death of Fannie terminated her life estate and all the children became on her death owners in equal shares of the vested remainder; that the plaintiffs were entitled to have their contract enforced by having the warranty deed to Guy canceled and Guy and his wife should be ordered to deliver [8]*8deeds to the other children. A second cause of action alleged facts in addition to the first cause of action and that relying upon Guy’s promise to prepare a deed pursuant to the contract the other children signed it without examining it and it referred in no way to the life estate and did not convey the eighty and the deed should be reformed. The third cause of action alleged that if the warranty deed was not adjudged void Guy should be held to have taken the property in trust as trustee for himself and the other children and the court should decree the trust and adjudge the children to be the owners of the property in equal shares. The fourth was a petition for partition of the real estate. The fifth was for an accounting. Judgment was asked on each of the causes of action, as demanded. The petition further alleged that Harry and Mabel had refused to join the action as plaintiffs and had been made defendants.

Guy, the main defendant, filed a motion to dismiss the action on the grounds of want of jurisdiction of the district court. On the hearing of this motion exhibits of proceedings in the probate court involving this same real estate and the same parties were introduced.

This motion alleged that December 4th on his own motion Glenn Wetzel was appointed and had been acting administrator of the estate of Fannie; that the administration was not completed and the probate court was exercising original and exclusive jurisdiction of the estate and it was in the process of administration when the action in district court-was filed November 3, 1948; that January 2, 1946, Glenn, acting as administrator, went upon the real estate, inventoried it and caused it to be appraised as an asset of the estate; that January 31, 1946, Guy filed in the estate his petition asserting his ownership of the entire quarter section and an undivided eighteen twenty-fourths of the eighty; that on March 25, 1946, the probate court entered its judgment that Guy was the owner in fee simple of the quarter section and of eighteen twenty-fourths of the eighty; that from such judgment Glenn, as administrator, and Faye, Maude and Glenn had appealed to the district court and the cause was then on the civil docket of that court, undetermined.

The final paragraph of the motion alleged that the district court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action until the jurisdiction over it of the probate court had ceased; that the probate court had original and exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter until the appeal from the probate court to the district [9]*9court was dismissed or terminated adversely to the appellants or until the administration of Fannie’s estate had been terminated.

On the hearing of this motion to dismiss most of the files in the probate court of the estate of Fannie Wetzel were introduced. They throw considerable light on the arguments of counsel and the holding of the trial court, so they will be noted now.

November 6, 1945, there was filed the verified petition of Glenn, alleging Fannie’s death intestate, having real property of the value of $5,000 and personal property of the probable value of $800, naming the heirs, and that administration was necessary to preserve the property; next was filed the inventory of Glenn, the administrator, including the quarter section and the undivided three-fourths interest in the eighty; next on January 1,1946, a petition by Guy.

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Related

In Re Estate of Meyer
381 P.2d 546 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1963)
Charvat v. Moore
205 P.2d 980 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 P.2d 768, 167 Kan. 6, 1949 Kan. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetzel-v-wetzel-kan-1949.