109 Kan. 584 | Kan. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff, Esther M. Smith, brought this suit against her son, Cameron Smith, and his wife, to set aside a contract by which she had agreed to will to the son 80 acres of land, or in case of his death before hers, to his children subject to a life estate therein to his wife, he to live on the land and care for it. She claims that the defendants had made life unbearable in her home and asks that she be given possession of the land to their exclusion.
The answer among other things alleged that seventeen years before the beginning of this suit the son made a verbal contract that he should live at home on the farm, take full charge of the work and personal property and operate the farm for his father and mother and at their death receive as compensation for his services the full legal title to the farm consisting of 160 acres; or if he should die preceding his parents, the title to go to his children, subject to a life estate to his wife; and that after the father’s death, the contract was changed so that a brother was to have one 80 and the defendant, Cameron Smith, the other. It was further alleged that the defendant carried put his part of the agreement faithfully, and that the mother had made the will as agreed to, but had later revoked it; that two grandchildren had made their home on the place and that the defendant had cared for them.
The court made findings of facts and conclusions of law by which it appears that the plaintiff and her husband engaged for many years in farming and accumulated a quarter section of land. The son, Curtis, did not remain at home after his
“14. About the time of the bringing of this action the plaintiff repudiated the contract and' procured from the probate court the will that* she had deposited there for the purpose of carrying out the same, and burned or destroyed it.
“15. The defendant, Cameron Smith, from 1902 has faithfully performed the contract on his part for 17 years and up to the time the same was abandoned and repudiated by the plaintiff and has raised crops in a good and farmer-like manner and paid off the mortgages on the farm and personal property out of the proceeds of said crops.
“16. The farm machinery and personal property that was on hand at the time the performance of the contract in question was commenced*587 in 1902, has been worn out or disposed of and replaced out of the .proceeds of crops that were raised on the farm in question since said time, and at the time of the repudiation of the contract in question said personal property consisted of horses, cows, farm implements, tractor, automobile, household furniture, savings stamps and bonds of the total value of about $4,000.00 and said farm was at said time of the value of $25,000.00, and the north 80 of same of the value of $13,000.00.
“17. That since the repudiation of said contract, the defendant, Cameron Smith, has planted and growing on said farm, 70 acres of wheat, 20 acres of oats and 24 acres of corn.
“18. That at the time of the repudiation of the contract the plaintiff was about 65 years old and her expectancy of life 11 years.
“19. At about the time or after the bringing of this suit, the plaintiff, Esther M. Smith, moyed into a little house on the farm in question and situated or located nearby the dwelling house thereon, theretofore occupied by herself and the defendant. And that she now lives in said house on said farm.”
As conclusions of law the court found—
“1. The plaintiff is not entitled to have the contract in question canceled or rescinded.
“2. The court should not compel the specific performance of the contract in question by the parties thereto. That the equities in the property, real and personal, should be adjusted between said parties on the basis of the time that said contract was performed as compared with the expectancy of the life of Esther M. Smith at the time of her breach or abandonment of said contract.
“3. That the defendant, Cameron Smith, be allowed 17/28 of the value of the south 80 of the farm in question and amounting to $7,892.85 and the same be made a lien upon the same and due and payable at the death of Esther M. Smith.
“4. If the contract in question had been fully performed to the death of Esther M. Smith, Cameron Smith would be entitled to whatever personal property she then owned, subject to the payment of her debts as to the amount'and value of the same at the time. We have no way of knowing if the contract had not been breached and Cameron Smith had continued in the farming and managing of the farm in question to the death of Esther M. Smith, and in view of the crops and the proceeds from the same prior to the breach of the same, there is good reason to believe that the amount and value of such personal property would not be less than the amount and value at the present time, to-wit: $4,000.00, and that Cameron Smith should be allowed 17/28 of said value, or $2,428.57, same to be due and payable out of the estate of Esther M.. Smith after her death.
“5. That the crops plantéd on the farm in question by Cameron Smith since the breach of the contract in question, should be settled for on the basis of rents or share of said- crops when gathered or harvested. That Cameron have half of said crops and that he deliver the other half of said crops to Esther M. Smith and that Cameron Smith be allowed to*588 retain the possession of the farm in question for the purpose of harvesting, cultivating and gathering said crops and to date not longer than January 1st, 1921, at which time his right to the possession of said farm or any part thereof is to cease and determine and to be surrendered to Esther Mi. Smith, together with the possession, all personal property of every nature and kind owned by Esther M. Smith.”
The defendants appeal and while no criticism of the findings of fact is made, the conclusions of law are met with the claim that they are not equitable, and counsel suggest various changes which they think should be made therein.
The plaintiff argues that the court found that on account of bad blood the parties could not live together on the farm for the purpose of carrying out the contract and that the amount awarded the son by the court is sufficient to compensate him for the work and services performed under the terms of the written contract, It is suggested that as long as she is living the mother is entitled to her homestead and that no court can deprive her of this constitutional right.
The findings of fact show that for seventeen years Cameron Smith faithfully carried out the terms of the contract he had made with his parents, and later modified by agreement with his mother, and that not until her hospital experience did she turn against him. There is nothing to indicate that she was in anywise justified in the charges she made against him, but on the contrary it is expressly found that such charges were without foundation; hence, in all these matters he was without fault, and the mutual bad blood and recriminations which rendered it, as the court found, impossible for the parties to live together seem to have been on account of the mother’s changed disposition towards the son and her unfounded charges against him.
We do not perceive that the homestead question is involved, for the land in controversy is as much the' homestead of the defendants as of the plaintiff and has been for many years.
The unfortunate change of disposition wrought upon the mother, evidently by her sickness and operation, while lamentable in the extreme, does not make a just ground for depriving the son of his rights under the contract or of the proceeds of his industry during the long term of years he has been in charge of the farm. We are unable to agree with the trial court as to the equitable requirements of the situation, but
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a decree to the effect: First, that the defendant be permitted to remain in possession of the farm, and operate it in accordance with the terms of the contract heretofore entered into between the defendant, Cameron M. Smith, and his parents, as later modified by the contract with his mother; should the plaintiff prefer to live apart from the defendants, that she be permitted to live elsewhere on the farm or at any other reasonable place selected by her. Second, that upon the death of the plaintiff the south 80 of the quarter section involved and the personal property shall go to Cameron Smith, or in case he should not be living at that time, such real and personal property to go to his children subject to a life estate to his wife, Amelia A. Smith, such life estate to cease in case she should marry again. Third, that the trial court retain jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties thereto with power to modify the decree from time to time as circumstances may require.