Cline v. Kennedy

Supreme Court of Kansas
Cline v. Kennedy, 108 Kan. 595 (Kan. 1921)
196 P. 237; 1921 Kan. LEXIS 231
Dawson

Cline v. Kennedy

Opinion of the Court

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The plaintiff brought proceedings to partition her maternal grandfather’s homestead, claiming all the interest of her deceased mother, Katherine Erwin.

The heirs of her mother were the plaintiff herself, her sister Mary, who later died unmarried and intestate, and plaintiff’s stepfather, James Erwin.

The trial court determined the proportionate interests of all the parties, including that of James Erwin.

Plaintiff appeals, contending that her stepfather, James Erwin, has no interest in the property. She is altogether wrong, however; for the same statute which invests the plaintiff with a portion of the dead Katherine’s property (Gen. Stat. 1915, §3841), likewise invested the dead Katherine’s husband with a portion, one-half of it. (Gen. Stat. 1915, §§ 3831, 3850.)

It is immaterial that Katherine and James never claimed an interest in the maternal grandfather’s homestead during their married life. If that fact had any potency, it would similarly affect plaintiff’s interest as well as that of her stepfather, be*596cause the rights of both are deraigned through Katherine. That James Erwin has married again since Katherine’s death, is also immaterial. A half interest in all of Katherine’s property and rights of property vested absolutely in James when Katherine died. His 'subsequent marriage did not divest him of that interest — no more than plaintiff’s marriage has stripped her of her interest. (Dodge v. Beeler, 12 Kan. 524; Couch v. Wright, 20 Kan. 103.)

The judgment is affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
Katherine Vaughn Cline v. Mary Kennedy
Status
Published
Syllabus
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Descents and Distributions — Rights of Surviving Husband. When a married woman dies intestate, leaving a husband and two children by a former husband, her heirs at law are her surviving husband and her children; and these heirs at law are vested at her death with all her property and rights of property; and a subsequent marriage of the husband to another woman does not divest him of his interest in his dead wife’s property.