Yaple v. Morris

398 P.2d 320, 194 Kan. 149, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 239
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1965
Docket43,814
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 398 P.2d 320 (Yaple v. Morris) 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
Yaple v. Morris, 398 P.2d 320, 194 Kan. 149, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 239 (kan 1965).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fatzer, J.:

The appellant, the special administrator of the estate of W. O. Yaple, deceased, commenced this action in the district court of Reno County, against the appellees, Doris Morris and Velma Thode, to set aside two warranty deeds executed by W. O. Yaple in favor of the appellees, upon the theory that the deeds were testamentary dispositions and that they were not delivered to the grantees during the lifetime of the grantor. The case was tried by the court which made findings of fact and conclusions of law that the deeds were not testamentary dispositions and that there was a valid delivery of them which vested a present interest in the *150 grantees during the lifetime of the decedent with only the enjoyment of the property being postponed until after the decedent’s death. The special administrator has appealed.

The decedent, a resident of Reno County, had, during the course of his lifetime, acquired ownership of his residence property in the city of Nickerson and an 80-acre farm in Rice County which he owned on February 17, 1960. The decedent was a widower who lived alone, he was elderly and nearly blind but was intelligent and mentally alert at all times until his death on March 2, 1961. While he had a number of relatives, mostly nieces and nephews, his devotion and affection was largely given to his nieces, Doris Morris and Velma Thode, the appellees.

On February 17, 1960, the decedent telephoned Lula M. Dunn and requested her to drop by his home. Mrs. Dunn was in the insurance and real estate business in Nickerson and had been a friend of the decedent for over 25 years. Sometime prior to 1955, W. O. Yaple and his wife had Mrs. Dunn prepare a last will and testament which she notarized, but the purported will was void for want of proper execution. About a year prior to February, 1960, the decedent discussed with Mrs. Dunn the making of an immediate gift of all his property to the appellees, but had done nothing more about it.

On the day in question, February 17, 1960, the decedent informed Mrs. Dunn he wanted to give all of his property to Doris Morris and Velma Thode and reserve to himself the right to occupy and use the property; that all of his physical needs were taken care of and that he had no use for the property other than to stay in his home and receive the rents from the farm land. He stated that the “girls” had been good to him; that he had finished with the property and that he wanted them to have it; that he knew they would take care of things, and it would make him happy to know they had the property. He further stated that his other relatives were “snoopy,” saying, “I can’t see but I can hear.” The decedent talked coherently; understood and knew what he was doing; knew the nature and extent of his property and how he wanted to transfer it,.and said, “I have decided what I want to do.”

The decedent made no mention of a will, but requested Mrs. Dunn to prepare “deeds” conveying all of his real estate to Doris Morris and Velma Thode, and dictated an affidavit to her, which he wanted prepared in connection with the deeds. Mrs. Dunn returned to her office, prepared the deeds and affidavit, and then *151 returned to the decedent’s home where the deeds and affidavit were executed and acknowledged by him. The decedent then put tire documents in a blank envelope and sealed it and told Mrs. Dunn that he would take care of the deeds. He instructed Mrs. Dunn not to mention to anyone what he had talked to her about, but he did not state whether he was going to tell the girls about the gifts immediately. Following the execution of the deeds and the making of the affidavit, the decedent seemed much relieved. He and Mrs. Dunn chatted about current affairs, in which he was very much interested, and he talked to her about some books he had formerly read. He became very philosophical, mentioned that he was ready to go, and quoted the closing lines of Kipling’s Recessional.

On February 26, 1960, the decedent took the sealed envelope to the Nickerson State Bank for the purpose of placing it in escrow. He talked to Aaron F. Toews, the bank’s cashier, who had known him as a customer and a depositor since 1941. The decedent handed Toews the envelope and Toews testified he said that, “he had given his land and also his house to two of his nieces, Doris Morris and Velma Thode, and he wished to place that envelope in escrow, to be delivered to these two girls after his death,” and that the deeds to the property were inside the envelope. At the direction of the decedent, Toews typed on the outside of the envelope the words “Escrow, W. O. Yaple, to be delivered to Velma Thode and Doris Morris at the death of W. O. Yaple.” Toews also made his own handwritten notation on the envelope, showing the escrow fee of $2.50 paid by the decedent, the date, and that it was placed in escrow by W. O. Yaple. After the deeds and affidavit were placed in escrow, the decedent never attempted to reclaim them or get them back, never attempted to exercise any control or authority over them nor attempted to modify, alter or destroy them! He continued to occupy the home, pay the taxes and receive the rents and income from the farm land until his death on March 2, 1961.

A day or so following the decedent’s death, the bank called Doris Morris and Velma Thode and asked them to come in for the opening of the escrow envelope. A vice president of the bank opened the envelope in their presence and delivered the deeds and the affidavit to the grantees. The deeds followed the Kansas statutory warranty form (G. S. 1949, 67-203), and conveyed the decedent’s residence and the farm land to the two grantees in fee *152 simple as tenants in common. The deeds were duly recorded. The affidavit in escrow with the deeds was admitted in evidence, and reads:

“I, the undersigned W. O. Yaple, hereby direct that the Warranty Deeds made and signed this 17th day of February, 1960, transferring my Nickerson property and my Rice County property to Mrs. Velma Thode and Mrs. Doris Morris shall replace any and all former wills and/or agreements. The above deeds shall be held at the Nickerson State Bank until my death at which time they shall be delivered to the above named persons, after recording.”

On March 8, 1961, Velma Thode was appointed and qualified as administratrix of the decedent’s estate. On June 23, 1961, she filed an inventory which did not list the real estate the decedent had given to the appellees. On his own petition, the appellant, Claude N. Yaple, an heir-at-law of the decedent, was appointed special administrator for the purpose of contesting the validity of the deeds and seeking to bring the property into the decedent’s estate as an asset thereof.

The appellant contends that the instruments executed by the decedent were testamentary in character and that he did not intend to convey any real estate or interest therein whatever before his death. The appellant concedes it is necessary to determine the intent of W. O. Yaple when he executed the documents in question, but argues the evidence shows that the acts and words of the decedent clearly disclose an intention on his part to make testamentary disposition of his property. The appellant relies chiefly upon a letter the decedent wrote to him in 1955, which states:

“. . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 P.2d 320, 194 Kan. 149, 1965 Kan. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yaple-v-morris-kan-1965.