Withers v. Love

83 P. 204, 72 Kan. 140, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 11, 1905
DocketNo. 14,115
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 83 P. 204 (Withers v. Love) 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
Withers v. Love, 83 P. 204, 72 Kan. 140, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 323 (kan 1905).

Opinions

[146]*146The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

Counsel, in addition to able oral arguments, have favored the court with well-prepared briefs which discuss every feature of the case, with ample citations of authorities. The case presents some difficult questions. The facts in many respects are remarkable.

A review of the evidence leaves no suspicion of bad faith upon the part of those who participated in the transactions, or of any attempt to gain an advantage over plaintiff by reason of the misfortunes which fell upon his household, culminating in September, 1892, when, with the mother of his children hopelessly insane, he was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of years, and his children dispersed from the home the family had occupied so long. On the contrary, it appears that all the brother-in-law Mylius did was undertaken with the purpose of conserving the interests of plaintiff and his family. He cared for the minor children, sold the personal property, purchased necessaries for the insane wife, paid the debts, of plaintiff, and on the latter’s return rendered a satisfactory account of his stewardship. While the petition to sell the supposed interest of the wife in the land was filed in the probate court within a few days after plaintiff was taken to prison, there was no undue haste in the proceedings to sell, and the sale made to Alsop was not completed until 1894 and brought the fair value of the land.

Plaintiff’s preliminary contentions are: That the power of attorney from plaintiff to Mylius was void, and all proceedings under it, including the deed made to Alsop, were void; that the alleged guardian’s deed, by which Mylius attempted to convey to Alsop the undivided one-half of the land as the interest of the wife, was void; that the court below, after striking out of the evidence the power of attorney, the deed made as attorney in fact and the guardian’s deed [147]*147to Alsop, committed error in refusing to strike out the deed from Alsop to Love, because with the former conveyances stricken out Alsop had nothing to convey.. Error also is urged because the court refused to strike out all of the testimony of Alsop and Mylius in reference to conversations about the sale by Mylius to Alsop. The claim is made that, if the sentence and incarceration of Withers in the penitentiary and the wife’s insanity rendered the deeds void, it left Mylius without authority as agent of Withers or of the wife to bind them in any respect.

The main contentions of plaintiff here, as below, are: (1) That the land was the homestead of plaintiff and his family, consisting of plaintiff, his wife, and children ; that it never ceased to be their homestead while the wife lived; that the leaving of the homestead by plaintiff and wife did not constitute an abandonment, because it was involuntary, occasioned by the sentence to and confinement in the penitentiary of plaintiff and the insanity of the wife; that the sentence of plaintiff suspended all his civil rights, so that his acts were void; and that during his confinement in the penitentiary he could not abandon the homestead; (2) that plaintiff was not estopped by his acts and conduct from claiming the land; (3) that if the court should hold that the homestead is not involved because it was abandoned, still plaintiff should have recovered an undivided one-half of the land, as the doctrine of equitable estoppel would not apply to the part attempted to be conveyed by the guardian’s deed because plaintiff never received the consideration paid for that portion, notwithstanding he might be held to have ratified the unauthorized act of Mylius in reference to the part conveyed as attorney in fact, for which he did accept the consideration.

Defendant vigorously maintains, on the contrary: (1) That the land was not a homestead; that the petition of plaintiff nowhere claims that it was a homestead; that as a matter of fact it was abandoned as a [148]*148homestead when the children of plaintiff left it after his sentence to the penitentiary and the furniture was removed from it; that if not abandoned by his act and the removal of the children it was abandoned by his acts upon his return from the penitentiary, because at that time his youngest children were of age and his family consisted of himself and wife; that she did not live with him and he did not support her; that she was insane, and if she were asked whether she desired to occupy or abandon the property she could not answer; that the act of occupancy must be that of a sane mind; (2) that every act of Mylius as agent of plaintiff was ratified by plaintiff with full knowledge of all the facts, after his disabilities had been removed and he had returned from the penitentiary, and, however void the power of attorney may have been, all that was done under it became valid and binding by the subsequent ratification; (3) that plaintiff is prevented by equitable estoppel from recovering the land or any part of it; (4) that the power of attorney was valid in law, and authorized Mylius to convey; that, while a person under sentence for a term of years cannot enter into executory contracts and call in aid the courts to enforce them, he may make a valid transfer of his property by will or deed.

We have stated here somewhat in detail the contentions of the parties, as set forth in their briefs, but many of them it will not be necessary to discuss. The trial court held that the sentence to the penitentiary of Withers for a term of years and his incarceration and confinement therein suspended all his civil rights, and that the power of attorney from Withers to Mylius and the deed from Mylius as attorney in fact for Withers to Alsop of the undivided one-half of the land were void. The court also held that the guardian’s deed from Mylius as guardian of the insane wife to Alsop of the other undivided one-half of the land was void.

Plaintiff in error makes no complaint of the rulings of the court in those respects. He is satisfied they [149]*149were correct. While counsel for defendant in error argue at some length the question of the effect to be given to the provision of section 2301 of the General Statutes of 1901, by which the civil rights of a person sentenced to confinement and hard labor for a term of years are suspended, it is not necessary for us to consider that question for the reason that no cross-petition in error is presented, and whether the court’s ruling was right or wrong upon the validity of the power of attorney and the deed made in pursuance of it is not before us. For the same reasons it must be assumed that the correctness of the ruling upon the guardian’s deed and the proceedings taken in the probate court are not open to discussion. These rulings of the court were made in excluding the testimony in reference to the power of attorney and the deeds. The court found generally for defendant, and, aside from some minor errors alleged in reference to certain oral testimony, and the admission of the deed from Alsop to Love, the main error relied upon is that the judgment should have been for plaintiff upon the law and the evidence.

Stripped of the unsubstantial matters, the questions involved, and the ones upon which the judgment must stand or fall, are narrowed down to these: (1) Was this a homestead ? (2) Conceding that it was, is plaintiff estopped by his acts and conduct from claiming it ?

That the land in controversy was originally the homestead of plaintiff and his family is not disputed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 P. 204, 72 Kan. 140, 1905 Kan. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withers-v-love-kan-1905.