Wilhelm v. Pfinning

1942 OK 256, 129 P.2d 580, 191 Okla. 321, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 422
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 23, 1942
DocketNo. 30092.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1942 OK 256 (Wilhelm v. Pfinning) 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
Wilhelm v. Pfinning, 1942 OK 256, 129 P.2d 580, 191 Okla. 321, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 422 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This is an action by Pauline Pfinning against Paulina Hauert, nee Wilhelm, and others, to quiet title to certain real property. Judgment was for plaintiff, and defendants appeal.

The lands in question constituted a portion of the estate of plaintiff’s father, Fred L. Schoeppe, who died testate in *322 1915 a resident of Carter county. Schoeppe’s will, according to the allegations of the petition, devised the property to plaintiff for life, then to her husband, John Pfinning, for life, with remainder to the Masonic Lodge. All parties seem to have so construed the will. We will therefore adopt the same construction.

Thereafter, on September 24, 1915, the plaintiff, for a consideration of $2,000, procured a deed on the premises from the Masonic Lodge naming therein herself and her husband as grantees. On September 20, 1920, her husband died testate a resident of the State of Arkansas, where the will was duly probated with the plaintiff and the defendant Paulina Hauert as the executrices named therein. No ancillary proceedings were had in this state.

By his will John Pfinning devised all his estate to plaintiff for life with remainder to defendants. But the lands here involved were not specifically mentioned in the will.

Plaintiff alleges that it was never intended that her husband, John Pfinning, should acquire any interest in the land by virtue of the deed aforesaid; that the same was purchased with her own funds, and that Pfinning held the half interest in trust for her, and that she was entitled to a decree establishing a resulting trust therein for her benefit.

Defendants denied that the. consideration for the deed was paid by plaintiff, and alleged that John Pfinning at the time of his death was the owner in fee of an undivided one-half interest in the land by virtue of said deed, and that by reason of Pfinning’s will they were the owners in remainder of said interest; that from 1919 the plaintiff had administered said estate jointly with Paulina Hauert, had accepted the provisions of the will and the benefits thereof, and by her acts had elected to take under the same, and was now es-topped to dispute its validity, and was barred by laches and the statute of limitations from maintaining this action. By cross-petition they asked that their title as devisees aforesaid be quieted against plaintiff’s claims.

In reply plaintiff charged that if she had ever known that John Pfinning was named in the deed as one of the grantees, such knowledge had entirely escaped her and that she was not conscious thereof until immediately prior to the commencement of this action.

As a further muniment of title plaintiff pleaded the final decree of distribution entered in the estate of her deceased father, Fred L. Schoeppe, on February 18, 1921, wherein the entire estate was distributed to her. Said decree was pleaded as res judicata.

The facts as clearly established by the evidence were that the entire consideration for the deed from the Masonic Lodge was paid by plaintiff out of her separate funds, and that until the fall of 1939 she was unaware of the fact that her husband, John Pfinning, was named as a grantee in said deed; that plaintiff had managed the land in no manner inconsistent with her complete ownership of the fee. She attended to the leasing thereof, and had retained for herself the proceeds derived therefrom. Beyond the bare fact that Pfinning was named as one of the grantees in the deed, there is nothing in the record to indicate that plaintiff was aware of any interest adverse to her full and complete ownership in fee simple. Pfinning’s will devised his estate in general terms. The land was not specifically described, except the devise included the testator’s “interest in the Fred L. Schoeppe estate.”

And, in substance, the above constitutes the written findings of fact of the trial court made pursuant to the request of the parties that special findings be made.

The court concluded as a matter of law that plaintiff’s acts in administering the estate of John Pfinning were insufficient to estop her from maintaining this action; that she was not barred either by laches or by limitation, and that John Pfinning held title to the one- *323 half interest for plaintiff’s benefit under a resulting trust created by reason of the fact that the consideration for said interest was paid by, and for the benefit of, the plaintiff (60 O. S. 1941 § 137).

On those findings of fact and conclusions of law the court rendered judgment for plaintiff quieting her title in the half interest standing in the name of John Pfinning.

Defendants say the judgment of the trial court was against the clear weight of the evidence and contrary to law.

The facts as proved clearly established a resulting trust in favor of plaintiff (sec. 137, supra). Whether she was guilty of laches for delay in asserting her beneficial interest was a matter for the trial court’s determination from the weight of the evidence. Aside from the deed itself there was nothing to warn plaintiff that an adverse claim was in the making. She said she was unaware that Pfinning’s name was in the deed, and the court believed her. Throughout the 19 years she managed the land as her own, and, in fact, it was her own, as revealed by the evidence. There is nothing to show or to sufficiently indicate that she ever pretended to claim less than the whole estate in fee simple. At least, the weight of the evidence would indicate nothing to the contrary.

It is true that the deed was of record, but that alone would not call for the application of the doctrine of laches. And we do not say whether actual notice would or would not affect plaintiff’s position in the particular circumstances surrounding this case. She said she did not know that the deed contained her husband’s name as a grantee. Laches is an equitable doctrine. It is applied independently of the statute of limitations in an effort to reach an equitable result. It is born of unreasonable delay. In 19 Am. Jur. 340, it is said:

“The basis of the doctrine of laches is said to be public policy which requires, for the peace of society, the discouragement of stale demands. The maxims which deal with the standing of a party to claim relief are expressive of the considerations upon which the doctrine is founded. The court will withhold relief if it would be inequitable to grant the complainant’s demand.”

In order, therefore, that the doctrine of laches be correctly applied, it should be first determined whether a refusal to apply would work perceptible inequity upon the one against whom the alleged stale demand is directed.

In the instant case plaintiff proved that she was the owner of the interest standing in the name of her deceased husband. There is ample evidence to show that defendants made no effort to dispose» of the remainder therein - allegedly devised to them by the will. Their position has not been altered, nor have they been misled in any way to their detriment. They may have thought they- actually had an interest in the land, but they took no affirmative action on that belief. There is nothing to show that they will suffer in any way by reason of plaintiff’s delay. Unlike the statute of limitations, laches does not depend on time alone. Mere delay is not sufficient to constitute laches.

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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 256, 129 P.2d 580, 191 Okla. 321, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilhelm-v-pfinning-okla-1942.