Title: In re Estate of Einsel
Citation: N/A
Docket Number: 109367
State: Kansas
Issuer: Kansas Supreme Court
Date: June 10, 2016

1 
 
 
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS 
 
No. 109,367 
 
CAROL EINSEL, 
Appellant, 
 
v. 
 
RODNEY EINSEL, individually; NANCY E. HAAS; CHARLENE EINSEL; RODNEY EINSEL, as 
Executor of the Estate of Anna Louise Einsel; et al., 
Appellees. 
 
 
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT 
 
1. 
An appellate court reviews a district court's exercise of powers in a partition 
proceeding under an abuse of discretion standard of review. Judicial discretion is abused 
if judicial action (1) is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable, i.e., if no reasonable person 
would have taken the view adopted by the trial court; (2) is based on an error of law, i.e., 
if the discretion is guided by an erroneous legal conclusion; or (3) is based on an error of 
fact, i.e., if substantial competent evidence does not support a factual finding on which a 
prerequisite conclusion of law or the exercise of discretion is based.  
 
2. 
The interpretation of a journal entry, like the interpretation of all written 
instruments, presents a question of law over which an appellate court exercises de novo, 
or unlimited, review. 
 
3. 
The primary rule in interpreting written instruments is to ascertain the intent of the 
parties, and thus, in interpreting an order the primary rule is to ascertain the intent of the 
 
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court. As a general rule, if the language of a written instrument is clear and can be carried 
out as written, the intent of the maker is made clear and there is no room for rules of 
construction. If the language cannot be carried out as written, rules of construction must 
be applied. In placing a construction on a written instrument, reasonable rather than 
unreasonable interpretations are favored by the law. Results which vitiate the purpose or 
reduce the terms to an absurdity should be avoided. The meaning of a written instrument 
should always be ascertained by a consideration of all pertinent provisions and never be 
determined by critical analysis of a single or isolated provision. 
 
4. 
An appellate court's decision, including remand instructions, forms a part of its 
mandate to the lower court, which shall be controlling in the conduct of any further 
proceedings necessary in the district court. 
 
Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed May 2, 2014. 
Appeal from Comanche District Court; E. LEIGH HOOD, judge. Opinion filed June 10, 2016. Judgment of 
the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is affirmed. Judgment of the district court is reversed and 
remanded with directions.  
 
Carol M. Park, of Glassman, Bird, Schwartz & Park, L.L.P., of Hays, argued the cause, and John 
T. Bird, of the same firm, was with her on the briefs for appellant.  
 
Charles H. Herd, of Coldwater, argued the cause and was on the briefs for appellee. 
 
The opinion of the court was delivered by 
 
Per Curiam:  The heart of the dispute in this appeal, which arises in the context of 
a partition action, raises a question of the correct interpretation of a journal entry of 
judgment in a prior divorce proceeding. More specifically, the parties disagree about the 
effect of language in the journal entry granting the wife a percentage of the husband's 
 
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remainder interest in an inheritance, which consisted mostly of land and mineral interests. 
The district court determined the decree granted the wife a money judgment. On appeal 
from that decision, the Court of Appeals reviewed the judgment de novo and held the 
divorce decree granted the wife an interest in property. Einsel v. Einsel, No. 109,367, 
2014 WL 1795993, at *2 (Kan. App. 2014) (unpublished opinion).  
 
On petition for review the husband argues the Court of Appeals erred in applying a 
de novo standard of review and in interpreting the divorce decree as granting the wife an 
interest in real property. We disagree with his arguments, and, as we explain below, we 
affirm the Court of Appeals' ruling, although we issue slightly different remand 
instructions. 
 
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 
 
A. Preliminary partition proceeding 
 
 
In January 2010, Carol Einsel filed a petition for partition in Comanche County 
District Court against her ex-husband, Rodney Einsel. Although Carol initially named 
several other members of the Einsel family as defendants, these parties were peripheral 
(and some were dismissed). Due to the shared surnames, we will refer to the parties by 
their first names in order to avoid confusion. All parties agree the dispute is really only 
between Carol and Rodney, and we will limit our recitation of the facts accordingly. 
 
The ownership interests at stake in this case involved the Einsel family ranch—
specifically, interests in 12 tracts of land in Comanche County (the surface rights), a total 
of 14 oil and gas wells in Comanche and Kiowa Counties (the mineral interests), and 
3 tracts of land with mineral interests in Kiowa County. Carol alleged she had an 
ownership interest in certain surface and mineral interests that had previously been 
 
4 
 
 
 
enjoyed only by Rodney and his family. Her petition did not differentiate between the 
surface rights and mineral interests and instead asserted these rights were all owned in the 
following percentages:  each of Rodney's two sisters, an undivided one-third; Rodney, an 
undivided 60% of one-third; and Carol, an undivided 40% of one-third. She requested an 
order specifying the parties' interests and directing partition pursuant to K.S.A. 60-1003; 
she later moved for payment of oil and gas proceeds from the 14 wells and the mineral 
interests in Kiowa County.  
 
In his answer, Rodney explained that Carol's claim derived from a 1994 journal 
entry of divorce (the "divorce decree") in their earlier divorce proceedings, which had 
been filed and heard in Ellis County District Court. The judge presiding over the divorce 
had awarded Carol 40% of Rodney's remainder interest in the inheritance he received 
during the marriage. Rodney disputed whether he actually received any interest in his 
inheritance during his marriage to Carol; regardless, he also argued that the divorce 
decree did not award Carol an interest in real property. According to Rodney, partition 
was inappropriate because Carol's interest was limited to the value of Rodney's remainder 
interest on the date of the divorce decree. In response to Carol's motion for payment of oil 
and gas proceeds, Rodney explained he and his sisters actually owned a one-sixth interest 
in the Einsel real estate and mineral interests, not a one-third interest as Carol claimed.  
 
The partition court denied as premature Carol's motion for payment of oil and gas 
proceeds, and it then scheduled a hearing and ordered briefing between the parties 
regarding Carol's ownership rights, if any, in the Einsel ranch and associated mineral 
interests. Essentially, the parties' disagreement at this point hinged on the nature of 
Carol's award in the divorce proceedings. Accordingly, we turn to the documents the 
parties submitted to the partition court regarding the divorce decree. 
 
 
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B.  Documents submitted to the partition court in advance of the hearing 
 
According to exhibits submitted by the parties, Carol and Rodney were married in 
May 1966. Rodney's father, Victor Einsel, died testate in April 1992; his will was 
admitted to probate in June 1992.  
 
Carol and Rodney experienced marital difficulties, and in December 1992 
(approximately 8 months after Victor's death), Carol petitioned for separate maintenance.  
 
Victor Einsel's estate 
 
In January 1993, the probate court entered a journal entry of final settlement on 
Victor's estate (the "probate order"). This probate order is relevant to the instant case 
because it defined what Victor owned at the time of his death and informed what Rodney 
could receive from Victor in inheritance. The probate order recounted that at the time of 
his death Victor owned an undivided one-half interest in the Einsel ranch in Comanche 
County (the surface rights) and also owned fractional interests in 14 oil and gas wells in 
Comanche and Kiowa Counties (the mineral interests). Victor also possessed a one-sixth 
or one-half interest in certain severed mineral interests in Comanche and Kiowa counties 
(the severed mineral interests). Victor held other property as a joint tenant in common 
with his wife, Anna Lou Einsel, and the probate court ruled that Victor's interest in this 
other property terminated upon his death, and full ownership devolved to Anna Lou as 
the surviving joint tenant.  
 
The divorce proceedings 
 
In June 1993, Rodney answered Carol's petition for separate maintenance and 
counterclaimed for divorce in Ellis County District Court. In a hearing before the divorce 
 
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court, Carol explained she was unemployed and had been unable to find work, was 
previously hospitalized due to emotional turmoil and had significant medical bills, had no 
means of support since Rodney stopped depositing money in their joint account, did not 
have reliable transportation, and was in need of funds.  
 
In an October 1993 hearing, the divorce court asked the parties if there would be 
substantial arguments about the value of any assets. Carol responded that there was only 
one such issue—"[t]he value of remainder interests in [Victor's] estate, a sizable amount 
of land in the estate." Rodney agreed there was an immediate issue as to "what the nature 
of his interest in that land is, if any."  
 
Prior to its final ruling, the divorce court received a valuation of Rodney's interest. 
According to the valuations, the Einsel ranch was valued at $892,680, and the royalty 
interests in Comanche and Kiowa Counties were worth $73,224, for a grand total of 
$965,904. Rodney owned a one-third remainder interest in one-half of this property (i.e., 
the half owned by Victor at the time of his death), valued at $160,984. Using actuarial 
tables, Rodney's net remainder interest value as of January 1994 was $68,802.95.  
 
The divorce court made its ruling in the divorce case in January 1994. The 
transcript of the final hearing shows the divorce court realized "there just isn't a lot of 
cash to go around" between Rodney and Carol. It recognized Carol was in "necessitate 
circumstances" and would likely remain that way despite her best efforts. Considering 
numerous factors, including employability and earning capacity, the divorce court 
awarded Carol $400 per month in alimony for 6 years.  
 
The divorce court then turned to the "last remaining major issue," Rodney's 
"remainder interest in the property in [Comanche] County and the royalty interest in 
[Comanche] County and Kiowa County." It noted the parties had stipulated that the 
 
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present value of the property was $68,802.95. The divorce court acknowledged Rodney's 
argument that because he only received an interest in the property upon Victor's death, 
right around when he and Carol separated, Carol should receive none of it; it also noted 
Carol's position that she should receive all of it.  
 
Ultimately, the divorce court concluded:   
 
"[T]he fair thing to do here—even considering that this was obtained as a result of 
inheritance, rather than the 'efforts of the parties' is to allow [Carol] to have the 
following:  I am going to give her forty percent of this remainder interest on the 
condition that [Rodney] has not paid her $22,500.00 within six months of today's 
date. That shall bear no interest. As I calculate it, 40% based upon this appraisal is 
$27,000.00 some dollars['] worth, therefore, [Rodney] can—if he feels that it is 
worth what the appraisal has listed it at—essentially can buy it back for less than 
the appraisal."  
 
 The divorce court issued a corresponding journal entry of divorce, in which it 
awarded Carol, inter alia: 
 
"[F]orty percent (40%) of the remainder interest of the inheritance received by 
[Rodney] during the marriage, on the condition that [Rodney] may opt to pay 
[Carol] the sum of $22,500.00 within six (6) months of the date of hearing, in which 
case [Rodney] shall receive all of the remainder interest."  
 
 
Rodney appealed, and in 1995 the Court of Appeals affirmed the divorce 
court's award to Carol—though it remanded for further findings of fact as to 
Rodney's income. In re Marriage of Einsel, No. 71,367, unpublished opinion filed 
May 12, 1995. 
 
 
8 
 
 
 
 
Anna Lou Einsel's estate 
 
The parties also submitted documents to the partition court showing that 
Rodney's mother, Anna Lou, died in October 2008, many years after the 
conclusion of the divorce proceedings. Her will was admitted to probate; her estate 
included her own undivided half interest in the Einsel ranch real estate, her 
undivided half interest in producing mineral rights in Comanche County, and her 
undivided whole interest in other tracts of land which she acquired as the 
surviving joint tenant to the land she and Victor owned. 
 
C. Arguments before the partition court 
 
Before the partition court, the parties primarily argued about the nature of Carol's 
award—was it an interest in a money judgment, as Rodney urged, or was it an interest in 
real property, as argued by Carol.  
 
In Rodney's view, the divorce decree did not grant (or was incapable of granting) 
Carol an interest in Victor's estate at all—but, even assuming it did, her claim was limited 
to 40% of the value of Rodney's remainder interest. Rodney reasoned that if the divorce 
court intended to give Carol 40% outright it would not have set the buyback value of the 
property at issue at $22,500.  
 
 
For her part, Carol argued the divorce decree gave her an interest in the Einsel 
ranch itself—an interest in real property. She, like Rodney, focused on the $22,500 
buyback provision—but, in her view, this valuation did not indicate her award was a 
money judgment but instead merely allowed Rodney to choose how to allocate his risk. 
Namely, he could pay the $22,500 lump sum and reclaim his whole interest in real 
property but risk predeceasing his mother and never experiencing the benefit of his 
 
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remainder interest (i.e., his interest would never become possessory). Or, he could not 
pay the lump sum and risk the property being worth more than $22,500 when Carol 
decided to foreclose on the interest.  
 
 
Carol explained that now she had decided to foreclose on the interest:  Anna Lou 
had passed away and Rodney's remainder interest had become a possessory interest—an 
interest in fee simple—and was subject to partition. She requested partition of the Einsel 
ranch as follows:  Carol, 6.66%; Rodney, 10%; each of Rodney's two sisters, 16.66%; 
and Anna Lou's estate/trust, 50%. Carol acknowledged some of the severed mineral 
interests identified as part of Victor's estate had expired or were sold during Anna Lou's 
life tenancy; but, she noted, Victor's will required Anna Lou to use proceeds from such 
sales to invest and reinvest in real and personal property to be distributed to the 
remaindermen. Accordingly, she requested partition of the 14 wells as follows:  Carol, 
13.33%; Rodney, 20%; and each of Rodney's two sisters, 33.33%.  
 
D. Partition court's decision 
 
After receiving the parties' submitted documents and briefs, the partition court 
held a hearing in November 2012 expressly to resolve the issue of the proper 
interpretation of the Ellis County District Court's 1994 divorce decree. The partition court 
first agreed with Carol that the divorce decree clearly meant to award her some interest in 
Rodney's share of Victor's estate.  
 
Looking at the submitted documents, the partition court paid particular attention to 
the valuations of Rodney's remainder interest that were provided to the divorce court. The 
partition court explained that $68,802.95 present interest value as of January 1994 
established the value of Rodney's reminder interest that he received during the 
marriage—and the divorce decree gave Carol "40 percent of this figure," which would be 
 
10 
 
 
 
$27,521.18. The partition court thus concluded that the divorce decree gave Carol an 
interest in a money judgment in the amount of $27,521.18. 
 
In the partition court's view, the buyback provision supported this interpretation:  
the buyback provision gave Rodney "an opportunity to purchase the full remainder 
interest back at a discount rate of $22,500, or just write out a $5,000 [approximate] 
discount if he did so within six months." Basically, the partition court explained, the 
divorce court was attempting to persuade Rodney to "pay a discounted lump sum to 
[Carol] so she would have a substantial sum of money to assist her with her immediate 
financial needs."  
 
Accordingly, the partition court found that Carol's interest in Rodney's inheritance 
was $27,521.18; it granted her a judgment in this amount. It then declared Rodney owned 
16.66% of the family ranch, each of his two sisters also owned 16.66%, and Anna Lou's 
estate/trust owned 50%. As for the mineral rights, Rodney owned 33.33% and each of his 
two sisters owned 33.33%. 
 
At this point in the proceedings Carol pointed out that if the divorce decree was 
interpreted as providing her only a money judgment, the divorce court had not made any 
provision for interest as would have been required under Kansas law. The partition court 
reviewed the divorce decree and ruled Carol would not be awarded any interest stemming 
from Rodney's failure to pay her $22,500 within 6 months of the divorce court's order.  
 
E. Court of Appeals decision 
 
Carol appealed to the Court of Appeals and argued the partition court erred in 
interpreting the nature of her award under the divorce decree. She reasoned the transcript 
 
11 
 
 
 
of the divorce court's ruling clearly evidenced its intent to give her an interest in real 
property, even if this intent was not clear from the divorce decree alone.  
 
In response, Rodney agreed the divorce decree, considered on its own, was 
insufficient to convey an interest in real property regarding the Einsel ranch. However, in 
his view, the divorce decree allowed Carol to receive $22,500 if Rodney paid within 6 
months, and, if not, 40% of $68,802.95 (the present value of Rodney's remainder 
interest)—which, according to Rodney, bore the "hallmarks of a secured transaction." 
Rodney contended the terms and structure of the award supported the partition court's 
interpretation of the divorce decree, but, in any event, the balance of equities also 
supported the partition court's decision. The partition court knew the whole history of 
Victor's estate and Carol and Rodney's divorce. It also knew that a decision to partition 
the Einsel ranch would affect Rodney's family, and it was within the court's equitable 
powers to determine Carol had no fee simple interest in the property. Rodney also urged 
the Court of Appeals to consider the equitable mortgage doctrine and view Carol's award 
as a lien against Rodney's property subject to discharge once Rodney paid her what he 
owed. 
 
Although the Court of Appeals did not specifically address Rodney's equitable 
mortgage argument, which he based on Fuqua v. Hanson, 222 Kan. 653, 567 P.2d 862 
(1977), or his brief contention that Carol's award was a secured transaction, it implicitly 
rejected these theories by ruling that the divorce decree awarded Carol an interest in real 
property, not an interest in a money judgment. Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, at *1-2. The 
panel ruled the divorce court "intended to award Carol an interest in real property, 
conditioned on Rodney's failure to pay her a lump sum of cash within 6 months of the 
order." Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, at *2. In so doing, the Court of Appeals disagreed 
with both parties' positions that the court needed to look beyond the journal entry of 
divorce—the written journal entry was the controlling document and there was "no 
 
12 
 
 
 
indication . . . that [the judge in the divorce proceeding] intended the award to be a 
monetary judgment." Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, at *2. 
 
Under the Court of Appeals' interpretation, the journal entry of divorce gave 
Rodney "two alternatives from which to choose":  either he could pay a lump sum of 
$22,500 right away and then wait for Anna Lou to die before he could enjoy the benefit 
of that payment; or he could choose not to pay the lump sum and risk Carol's 40% share 
being worth more than $22,500 when his remainder interest became possessory upon 
Anna Lou's death. Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, at *2. The Court of Appeals acknowledged 
it was clear the divorce court's order "was designed to benefit Carol no matter which 
option Rodney chose"—if Rodney paid $22,500 immediately or within 6 months, then 
Carol's immediate need for money would be satisfied; and if Rodney did not pay the 
$22,500 Carol would presumably have a larger benefit in the future, satisfying the 
equities of the situation involving the parties' different earning capacities. Einsel, 2014 
WL 1795993, at *2. Since Rodney elected not to pay, the condition in the award was met 
and Carol was left with 40% of his remainder interest in real property—not a money 
judgment. 2014 WL 1795993, at *2. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals "[r]eversed and 
remanded with directions to grant Carol's request for partition as set forth in her petition." 
2014 WL 1795993, at *3. 
 
We granted Rodney's petition for review of the Court of Appeals' decision and 
have jurisdiction pursuant to K.S.A. 60-2101(b) ("The supreme court shall have 
jurisdiction to correct, modify, vacate or reverse any act, order or judgment of a district 
court or court of appeals in order to assure that any such act, order or judgment is just, 
legal and free of abuse.").  
 
 
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ANALYSIS 
 
 
Rodney's petition for review raised five issues, which we have condensed into 
three:  (1) What is the proper standard of review? (2) What did the divorce court award to 
Carol? and (3) What are the proper instructions on remand? 
 
 
Before we resolve the parties' arguments, a brief overview of partition in Kansas 
helps place the parties' arguments in perspective. "Partition" refers to dividing up an 
estate or interest in real property into separate, distinct portions so that owners may own 
their pieces separately. See generally K.S.A. 60-1003. Parceling out an estate in this way 
may be desirable for any number of reasons—perhaps the owners wish to terminate their 
relationship or avoid the discord that so often comes with shared possession.  
 
Once an owner/petitioner requests partition and the remaining owners/defendants 
answer, the district court shall make an order "specifying the interest of the respective 
parties and directing partition." K.S.A. 60-1003(c)(1). An order "directing partition" does 
not automatically carve up an estate:  instead, it merely marks the start of the actual 
partition process. See K.S.A. 60-1003(c)(1). 
 
After directing partition the district court shall appoint three commissioners; it is 
these commissioners, not the court, who partitions the property among the parties 
according to their respective interests. K.S.A. 60-1003(c)(2) (also setting forth procedures 
if partition is impracticable or manifestly injurious). Once the commissioners prepare 
their report for the court, any party may file exceptions. K.S.A. 60-1003(c)(3). After a 
hearing, the judge may approve, disapprove, or modify the commissioners' report as 
justice and equity might require. K.S.A. 60-1003(c)(3). 
 
 
The district court's powers in partition proceedings are broad—once it obtains 
jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter in the case, a district court has "full 
 
14 
 
 
 
power to make any order not inconsistent with the provisions of this article that may be 
necessary to make a just and equitable partition between the parties, and to secure their 
respective interests, or may refuse partition if the same would result in extraordinary 
hardship or oppression." K.S.A. 60-1003(d); see Peterson v. Peterson, 173 Kan. 636, 
641, 251 P.2d 221 (1952) (asserting that a district court acting pursuant to this statute 
"has plenary power to determine the right, title and interest of the parties to the action"). 
Although a district court acting pursuant to its partition powers may not create new 
ownership interests, it may determine whether a particular party actually has an 
ownership interest. See Jones v. Anderson, 171 Kan. 430, 435, 233 P.2d 483 (1951) ("A 
partition action is particularly designed and suited to settle any and all rights of cotenants 
in and to the property involved. The district court in such a proceeding has full and 
complete power to adjudicate every legal and equitable right of the parties to the 
litigation.").  
 
 
A district court possesses wide discretion in partition proceedings because such 
proceedings require use of the court's equitable powers, meaning its powers to make a 
fair and just division of property based on the circumstances of a particular case. See 
Home-Stake Production Co. v. Tri-State Pipe Co., 197 Kan. 163, 167, 169-70, 415 P.2d 
377 (1966); Peterson, 173 Kan. at 641 (noting that district courts involved in partition 
proceedings have "the same powers as were exercised by chancery courts under equity 
practice"); see also Johnson v. Burns, 160 Kan. 104, 111, 159 P.2d 812 (1945) 
("Ordinarily where there is as wide a discretion reposed in a trial court as is reposed in it 
in partition actions we are reluctant to interpose our judgment for that of the trial court."). 
 
 
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With this brief overview, we turn to the issues at hand. 
 
I. 
DID THE COURT OF APPEALS ERR IN REVIEWING THE PARTITION COURT'S 
DECISION DE NOVO INSTEAD OF REVIEWING FOR ABUSE OF DISCRETION? 
 
Rodney first argues a partition court wields plenary power and, as a result, the 
Court of Appeals should have applied an abuse of discretion standard of review rather 
than unlimited or de novo review. Carol, in her brief to the Court of Appeals, had 
advocated for de novo review. 
 
Despite our repeated references to a district court's broad powers in partition 
proceedings, our caselaw does not suggest, as Rodney would have us conclude, that a 
district court's plenary powers are absolute and entirely beyond appellate review. See 
Peterson, 173 Kan. at 641 (concluding, despite the district court's plenary partition 
powers, that the district court had made a reversible error of law); see also Johnson, 160 
Kan. at 111 (explaining the court is "ordinarily" reluctant to supplant the partition court's 
judgment because it possesses a wide "discretion"). Instead, an appellate court reviews a 
district court's exercise of powers in a partition proceeding under an abuse of discretion 
standard of review. See Miller v. Miller, 222 Kan. 317, 320, 564 P.2d 524 (1977), 
abrogated in part on other grounds by Walnut Valley State Bank v. Stovall, 223 Kan. 
459, 574 P.2d 1382 (1978); Sheets v. Simms, 36 Kan. App. 2d 361, 362, 364, 138 P.3d 
1249 (2006) (reviewing a partition decision for abuse of discretion).  
 
"Judicial discretion is abused if judicial action (1) is arbitrary, fanciful, or unreasonable, 
i.e., if no reasonable person would have taken the view adopted by the trial court; (2) is 
based on an error of law, i.e., if the discretion is guided by an erroneous legal conclusion; 
or (3) is based on an error of fact, i.e., if substantial competent evidence does not support 
a factual finding on which a prerequisite conclusion of law or the exercise of discretion is 
based." State v. Ward, 292 Kan. 541, 550, 256 P.3d 801 (2011), cert. denied 132 S. Ct. 
1594 (2012). 
 
16 
 
 
 
 
The issue upon which this case turns is whether the journal entry of judgment in 
the Einsels' divorce proceeding granted Carol a money judgment rather than an 
ownership interest in property. The interpretation of a journal entry, like the interpretation 
of all written instruments, presents a question of law over which an appellate court 
exercises de novo, or unlimited, review. See Steele v. Guardianship & Conservatorship 
of Crist, 251 Kan. 712, 719, 840 P.2d 1107 (1992) (construing a journal entry). Abuse of 
discretion review necessarily "'includes review to determine that the discretion was not 
guided by erroneous legal conclusions,'" in cases where the question is whether the 
district court abused its discretion by making an error of law. Likewise, "'[l]ittle 
turns . . . on whether we label [appellate] review of this particular question abuse of 
discretion or de novo.'" State v. White, 279 Kan. 326, 332, 109 P.3d 1199 (2005) (quoting 
Koon v. United States, 518 U.S. 81, 100, 116 S. Ct. 2035, 135 L. Ed. 2d 392 [1996]).  
 
This is precisely the situation here:  The district court's interpretation of the 
Einsels' divorce decree is a legal conclusion subject to de novo review by an appellate 
court. If the district court relied on an erroneous interpretation of that written instrument 
it would constitute an abuse of its discretion. Thus, the Court of Appeals applied the 
correct, de novo standard of review to the district court's legal conclusion. While the 
better practice might have been for the Court of Appeals to have started by recognizing 
the overarching abuse of discretion standard of review in partition proceedings, here there 
was no practical difference in jumping to de novo review of the partition court's 
interpretation of the journal entry of divorce. Any mistake of law on this point would 
qualify as an abuse of discretion. See White, 279 Kan. at 332; Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, 
at *2. 
 
Rodney's contention that Carol's claim was adjudicated on the facts and that the 
partition court fashioned an equitable ruling after considering these facts thus somewhat 
 
17 
 
 
 
misses the point:  such conclusions would ordinarily be left in place out of deference to a 
partition court's wide discretion, see Johnson, 160 Kan. at 111. But in Carol's case these 
conclusions were in large part based on the partition court's interpretation of a journal 
entry of divorce—a legal question, see White, 279 Kan. at 332. 
 
Accordingly, we hold the Court of Appeals applied the correct standard of review 
when reviewing the partition court's order. 
 
II. 
DID THE COURT OF APPEALS ERR IN IDENTIFYING THE NATURE OF CAROL 
EINSEL'S INTEREST AS ONE IN REAL PROPERTY, AS OPPOSED TO A MONEY 
JUDGMENT? 
 
We now arrive at the heart of the case:  what, exactly, did the divorce decree give 
to Carol? Rodney argues it was a monetary judgment, and he gives a plethora of reasons 
why the balance of equities supported the partition court's decision, including:  (1) the 
divorce case was filed only 6 months after Victor Einsel died; (2) Rodney did not receive 
the land interest from Victor's estate until after the divorce was filed; (3) Carol did not 
contribute money or labor to the land at issue and had no family ties to the property; (4) 
Rodney's property interest was subject to his mother's life estate; (5) neither Carol nor 
Rodney had any significant assets as of the divorce; (6) Carol had immediate financial 
needs after the divorce; (7) Rodney did not have the ability to exercise the buyback 
provision in the journal entry of divorce and pay $22,500 to Carol within 6 months; (8) 
Rodney's mother was able to pay that $22,500 to Carol; and (9) Rodney's sisters' 
undivided interests in the family ranch could be lost in partition. Under Rodney's 
interpretation, the whole point of the divorce award was to provide for Carol's immediate 
needs, not to provide Carol with either a short-term lump payment or a long-term 
investment benefit.  
 
 
18 
 
 
 
Rodney further asserts that the unacknowledged "elephant in the room" is that 
Rodney's mother, Anna Lou, was supposed to be the one to pay Carol's $22,500 cash 
award—she had the resources, while Rodney did not, and the divorce court assumed that 
by collateralizing payment of the cash award with an interest in the Einsel family ranch, 
Anna Lou would pay out of fear that otherwise her family's future interests would be lost. 
Rodney argues this unacknowledged strategy is disturbing and, on its own, justifies an 
equitable intervention. 
 
Rodney also renews his argument that the divorce court did not award Carol a 
fixed share of the land but rather employed a conditional transfer of a property interest to 
collateralize payment of a cash award—in other words, the divorce court set up Carol's 
award as a secured transaction.  
 
As we mentioned above, the interpretation of a written instrument is a matter of 
law over which we exercise de novo review. Steele, 251 Kan. at 719; Godfrey v. 
Chandley, 248 Kan. 975, 977, 811 P.2d 1248 (1991) (permitting an appellate court to 
construe an instrument and determine its legal effect). The primary rule in interpreting 
written instruments is to ascertain the intent of the parties, and thus, in interpreting an 
order the primary rule is to ascertain the intent of the court. See, e.g., Liggatt v. 
Employers Mut. Casualty Co., 273 Kan. 915, 921, 46 P.3d 1120 (2002). "As a general 
rule, if the language of a written instrument is clear and can be carried out as written," the 
intent of the maker is made clear and "there is no room for rules of construction." See 
Godfrey, 248 Kan. at 977. 
 
If the maker's intent is not clear, meaning we apply the rules of construction , we 
have explained: 
 
 
19 
 
 
 
"'In placing a construction on a written instrument, reasonable rather than unreasonable 
interpretations are favored by the law. Results which vitiate the purpose or reduce the 
terms of the contract to an absurdity should be avoided. The meaning of a contract should 
always be ascertained by a consideration of all pertinent provisions and never be 
determined by critical analysis of a single or isolated provision.'" Arnold v. S.J.L. of 
Kansas Corp., 249 Kan. 746, 749, 822 P.2d 64 (1991) (quoting Garvey Center, Inc. v. 
Food Specialties, Inc., 214 Kan. 224, Syl. ¶ 3, 519 P.2d 646 [1974]). 
 
 
Here, the Court of Appeals deemed the plain meaning of the divorce decree's 
language sufficient to discern the divorce court's intent. Einsel, 2014 WL 1795993, at *2; 
see Godfrey, 248 Kan. at 977. We agree. 
 
 
The award to Carol in the divorce decree consists of three clauses: 
 
Clause 1: 
"forty percent (40%) of the remainder interest of the inheritance 
received by [Rodney] during the marriage," 
 
Clause 2: 
"on the condition that [Rodney] may opt to pay [Carol] the sum of 
$22,500.00 within six (6) months of the date of hearing," 
 
Clause 3: 
"in which case [Rodney] shall receive all of the remainder interest."  
 
 
Significantly, the wording of the divorce decree's first clause does not award Carol 
40% of the value of Rodney's remainder interest but rather 40% of Rodney's remainder 
interest itself:  "forty percent (40%) of the remainder interest of the inheritance received 
by [Rodney] during the marriage." See Godfrey, 248 Kan. at 977-78 (endorsing a four-
corners approach to interpretation of a written instrument). Rodney's interest, inherited 
from Victor, was a remainder interest in real property—both the partition court and the 
Court of Appeals acknowledge this, and Rodney does not seriously contest it at this point.  
 
 
20 
 
 
 
 
In addition, all three clauses in the divorce decree, read together, clearly show the 
divorce court meant to give Carol an interest in real property. See Arnold, 249 Kan. at 
749 (considering all pertinent provisions of a written instrument). Reading the first clause 
to provide Carol with only a money judgment is inconsistent with the remaining language 
and produces an unreasonable result. See McHenry v. Smith, 154 Kan. 528, 530-31, 119 
P.2d 493 (1941) ("[C]onstruction should be given to a judgment as will give force and 
effect to every word of it, if possible, and make it as a whole consistent, effective and 
reasonable."). Namely, if Rodney exercised his rights under the second clause's buyback 
provision, he would then, under the third clause, "receive all of the remainder interest"—
but if Rodney was to "receive" anything at all after giving Carol $22,500, he would be 
receiving Carol's remainder interest in real property. To see the award as giving Carol a 
money judgment would be unreasonable—there would be nothing for Rodney to 
"receive" after paying Carol the $22,500. 
 
 
Even if we were to look beyond the journal entry of divorce, the parties' 
statements before the divorce court and the divorce court's statements during the final 
hearing support our interpretation. In the October 1993 hearing, for example, Carol stated 
there was only one big issue—"[t]he value of remainder interests in [Victor's] estate, a 
sizable amount of land in the estate." (Emphases added.) Rodney agreed there was an 
issue about "what the nature of his interest in that land" would be. (Emphasis added.) The 
divorce court, for its part, described Rodney's "remainder interest in the property . . . and 
the royalty interest" as the last major issue in the divorce; the divorce court also rejected 
Rodney's argument he had no present interest in the Einsel ranch or the 14 wells because 
it "underst[ood] exactly what a remainder interest is." (Emphasis added.)  
 
We are not persuaded to the contrary by the partition court's justification for 
finding a money judgment. The partition court did not discuss the plain language of the 
divorce decree but instead focused on the fact that the divorce court had been presented 
 
21 
 
 
 
with evidence about the value of Rodney's interest. But the divorce decree itself did not 
mention this present value of Rodney's interest or what 40% of this value would be, and 
so the partition court's interpretation that Carol was awarded 40% of the value of 
Rodney's remainder interest seems tenuous. Additionally, we note the divorce decree 
proposed no timeline for Rodney to pay this supposed monetary judgment of 40% of the 
value of Rodney's remainder interest once 6 months had elapsed, did not provide for any 
interest on the sum, and did not even state when this supposed money judgment would be 
due. And, of course, if the divorce court meant to provide Carol with money, it could 
simply have ordered Rodney to pay Carol $22,500 or some other sum immediately or 
within a set time frame. 
 
 
We are also unmoved by the equitable factors urged by Rodney. As we stated in 
our introduction to partition proceedings, the partition court's powers are not entirely 
unbounded. Equity comes into play when determining whether and to what extent 
partition is possible or just, but a district court cannot, in the name of equity, disregard 
legal ownership under an instrument of law like a journal entry of divorce. See, e.g., 
K.S.A. 60-1003; Miller, 222 Kan. at 320 ("The trial courts necessarily exercise wide 
judicial discretion in partition actions, but that discretion is exercisable primarily in the 
area of making a fair and just division between the parties."). 
 
Accordingly, we agree with the Court of Appeals' decision reversing the partition 
court's order. The divorce decree gave Carol an interest in real property, with the 
stipulation that Rodney could buy this interest back within 6 months for $22,500. He 
failed to do so, meaning Carol's interest in real property stands. 
 
By virtue of reaching this conclusion, we need not spend much ink rejecting 
Rodney's hasty reference that the divorce decree set up Carol's award as a secured 
transaction. He has pointed to no evidence supporting this theory, and there is no 
 
22 
 
 
 
indication either the divorce court or the partition court viewed the divorce decree in this 
light. We also reject his theory that the divorce decree set up a lien or a mortgage in line 
with the equitable mortgage doctrine:  the divorce decree made no mention of such 
conveyances and, as we have already explained, the divorce decree did not set forth a 
judgment amount or make any provision for interest. In short, we affirm our holding that 
the divorce decree gave Carol an interest in real property. 
 
III. 
SHOULD THE COURT OF APPEALS' REMAND INSTRUCTIONS STAND? 
 
Rodney raises two concerns with the Court of Appeals' remand instructions:  First, 
they would impermissibly curtail the partition process; and second, the remand 
instructions force the district court to give Carol a higher percent interest in the Einsel 
estate than the divorce court initially awarded. 
 
An appellate court's decision, including remand instructions, forms a part of its 
mandate to the lower court, which "shall be controlling in the conduct of any further 
proceedings necessary in the district court." K.S.A. 60-2106(c). Subject to some limited 
exceptions, a district court must carry the mandate into execution and "'cannot vary it, or 
examine it for any other purpose than execution; nor give any other or future relief; nor 
review it upon any matter decided on appeal, for error apparent; not intermeddle with it, 
further than to settle so much as has been remanded.'" State v. Collier, 263 Kan. 629, 636, 
952 P.2d 1326 (1998) (quoting Sibbald v. United States, 37 U.S. [12 Pet.] 488, 492, 
9 L. Ed. 1167 [1838]); see also Huffman v. Saul Holdings Ltd. Partnership, 262 F.3d 
1128, 1133 (10th Cir. 2001) (recognizing certain well-established exceptions to the 
mandate rule, permitting the district court to depart from the mandate rule if blatant error 
would result in serious injustice). 
 
 
 
23 
 
 
 
Thus, what exactly the Court of Appeals ordered in its remand instructions can 
become an important issue of dispute between the parties. Whether a district court 
complied with a Court of Appeals mandate, and the proper interpretation of a mandate, 
are questions of law over which we exercise de novo review. State v. Guder, 293 Kan. 
763, 765, 267 P.3d 751 (2012); see United States v. Shipp, 644 F.3d 1126, 1128 (10th 
Cir. 2011); see also Collier, 263 Kan. at 636 (explaining the mandate rule is really a 
subspecies of the law of the case doctrine).  
 
Here, the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the partition court's decision 
"with directions to grant Carol's request for partition as set forth in her petition." Einsel, 
2014 WL 1795993, at *3. Rodney fears that upon receiving the Court of Appeals' 
instructions the district court would immediately issue a final order of partition, thus 
denying him an opportunity to show how partition would result in hardship. These fears 
are misplaced. As set forth in our partition statutes, an order directing partition marks the 
beginning of partition proceedings—following the Court of Appeals' instructions, the 
district court would direct partition, appoint commissioners, hear objections to the 
commissioners' report, and direct further proceedings if need be. See K.S.A. 60-1003(c)-
(d). The parties would still be able to influence the partition court and resolve any 
grievances, and the partition court would still be able to exercise its considerable powers 
as a court of equity. We simply do not see a reasonable risk that the district court would 
misunderstand the Court of Appeals' instructions and jump straight to a final order of 
partition. To the extent ambiguity might have existed, we clarify that the district court 
should follow statutory partition procedures on remand.  
 
 
We are sensitive, however, to Rodney's second point, which is that the Court of 
Appeals' remand instructions might prompt the district court to make an error regarding 
Carol's ownership rights. Even though the Court of Appeals correctly determined the 
 
24 
 
 
 
nature of Carol's interest as one in real property, the extent of that interest is a separate 
matter.  
 
We recall the divorce decree gave Carol "forty percent (40%) of the remainder 
interest of the inheritance received by [Rodney] during the marriage." It seems to us that 
Carol has claimed different percentages in the Einsel estate at different times during the 
proceedings. 
 
For example, Carol's petition stated that Rodney owned 60% of one-third of the 
total surface rights and mineral interests and that she owned 40% of one-third. Thus, 
Carol's petition for partition appeared to seek 40% of a one-third interest in all of the 
surface rights associated with the Einsel ranch, even though the divorce decree entitled 
her to only 40% of a one-third interest in Rodney's remainder interest at the time of his 
father's death, which was the remainder interest he inherited during his marriage to Carol. 
Yet at other times, such as in her brief to the district court, she claimed 40% of a one-
third interest in half of the total surface rights. We see similar issues with her requests for 
her share in the mineral interests and severed mineral interests. 
 
We think there is some question as to whether Carol's petition for partition 
requested 40% of what Rodney inherited during the marriage as a result of his father's 
death or instead requested 40% of Rodney's current surface rights, mineral interests, and 
severed mineral interests now that his mother has also passed. There is thus a real risk 
that the Court of Appeals' instructions to grant Carol's "request for partition as set forth in 
her petition" would result in the district court ascribing to Carol a higher percentage of 
ownership in the whole than she is entitled to. 2014 WL 1795993, at *3. 
 
Accordingly, although we approve the Court of Appeals' conclusion regarding the 
nature of Carol's award—an interest in real property—we leave it to the district court to 
 
25 
 
 
 
consider, in the first instance, whether Carol's petition for partition accurately describes 
the extent of Rodney's property received through inheritance and, correspondingly, her 
ownership in that property. See K.S.A. 60-1003(c) (stating the partition court's first duty 
is to specify the interest of the parties and direct partition).  
 
The judgment of the Court of Appeals reversing the district court is affirmed. The 
judgment of the district court is reversed and remanded with instructions. 
 
STEGALL, J., not participating. 
RENE S. YOUNG, District Judge, assigned.1 
 
                                                 
 
 
1REPORTER'S NOTE:  District Judge Young was appointed to hear case No. 109,367 
vice Justice Stegall under the authority vested in the Supreme Court by art. 3, § 6(f) of 
the Kansas Constitution.