65 Tex. 631 | Tex. | 1886
The lot in controversy was community property, owned by Herman Yungst and his wife, and it was their homestead. Hnder the findings of the jury, for the present consideration of this case, it must be held that the conveyance from Yungst and wife, of date March 15, 1882, was intended simply as a mortgage to secure the payment of a sum of money then borrowed by Yungst from W. J. and J. J. Settegast.
So considered, that conveyance was inoperative without reference to whether Mrs. Yungst was sane at the time the deed of that date was executed. The reconveyance by W. J. and J. J. Settegast to Her- • man Yungst, of date October 3, 1883, could have no effect upon the title, and most likely was intended to give to the Settegasts a security for the money originally loaned by them in the form of purchase money notes, and thereby to cover up, so far as 'could be done, the real transaction between the parties.
Mrs. Yungst died on December 2, 1882, leaving minor children, who are the appellees, and the property in controversy continued to be the homestead of Yungst and his family until after the death of his wife. Yungst seems to have been indebted, at the time of the death of his wife, in a sum equal to the value of the property. A part of this indebtedness doubtless consisted in the debt to the Settegasts, contracted March 15, 1882, which, notwithstanding the changes in the form of the instruments which evidenced it, still existed ; a part consisted in taxes due on the property for many years, and the residue in debts contracted to different persons. Prom the testimony of Herman Yungst, it is reasonable to infer that the greater part of the indebtedness existing at the death of his wife, had its origin in expenses incurred in her behalf, during the affliction that continued until the time of her death. The title of the appellant must depend upon the power of Herman Yungst to convey the property to him by the deed of date September 17, 1884.
This power results from the nature of the-community estate, and, as has been often held, was not withdrawn by the act of 1856, which, when the survivor qualified under it, gave other and more enlarged powers. Dawson v. Holt, 44 Tex. 178; Lumpkin v. Murrell, 46 Tex. 52; Sanger v. Moody, 60 Tex. 98.
It has been held in several cases that the survivor, whether husband or wife, who qualified under the act of August 26,1856, has the power to sell a community homestead, and that such right is not affected by the fact that the estate is insolvent. Johnson v. Taylor, 43 Tex. 122 ; Dawson v. Holt, 44 Tex. 174; Cordier v. Cage, 44 Tex. 535 ; Watkins v. Hall, 57 Tex. 2; Shannon v. Gray, 59 Tex. 252.
“The children have no interest in the homestead, as such, as against the surviving parent, by virtue of the homestead rights of the deceased parent. If it was the community property of their parents, they inherit the share of the deceased parent, just as they inherit other community property.” Johnson v. Taylor, 43 Tex. 122; Tadlock v. Eccles, 20 Tex. 782; Brewer v. Wall, 23 Tex. 586; Grothaus v. DeLopez, 53 Tex. 670; Shannon v. Gray, 59 Tex. 252.
This being true, if debts exist, we do not see any reason why the power of a survivor to sell community homestead for the purpose of paying them shall not exist as fully, by reason of the facts of the survivorship and debts, as by reason of a qualification under the statute. The first gives a power more restricted than does the latter, but either gives the general power to sell community property if debts exist!
The case of Johnson v. Harrison seems to have been brought by children to recover a community homestead sold by the survivor without qualification under the statute, and the rights of the purchaser was made to depend upon the existence or non-existence of community debts at the time of the sale, and there is nothing in the
The principles announced in the cases we have cited seem to us to lead inevitably to the conclusion that Herman Yungst had power to convey to the appellant, on September 17, 1884. It is claimed, however, that if this would have been true under the laws existing prior to the adoption of the present constitution, that, it is not so under the provisions of that instrument.
The Constitution provides that: “ On the death of the husband or wife, or both, the homestead shall descend and vest in like manner as other real property of the deceased, and shall be governed by the same laws of descent and distribution, but it shall not be partitioned among the heirs of the deceased during the lifetime of the surviving husband or wife, or so long as the survivor may elect to use or occupy the same as a homestead, or so long as the guardian of the minor children of the deceased may be permitted, under the order of the proper court having the jurisdiction, to use and occupy the same.” Constitution, art. 16, sec. 52.
This provision of the Constitution applies to all homesteads, whether the estates to which they belong be solvent or insolvent. It makes no distinction, and the courts have no power to make any. It regulates the vestiture of title, and descent and distribution, in that it subjects it to the same rules which the legislature may provide for any other real property; but it gives, under certain conditions, possessory rights, which may exist without any right whatever by inheritance under the general laws of descent.
It does not confer on minor children any right in reference to the homestead which did not before exist, but may, in cases of insolvent estates, operate a denial to them ofLsome rights which the former law gave them.
If the homestead be the separate property of the surviving parent, he or she may certainly sell it, as under the former law. If it be the separate property of the deceased parent, it secures to the survivor the use of the property so long as he or she elects to occupy it, even against children who hold the legal title.
If it be community property, it secures to the survivor the same right as against children who inherit one-half of it from the deceased parent.
If both parents die, the right of minor children, through a guardian, to occupy the homestead, is not an absolute right, as is that
It may be denied, and partition with adult heirs directed, if to the court it seems advisable. All these matters but tend to show that minors take title to homestead property, just as they take title to other real property, except, as in the terms of the constitution, they may have a possessory right which adult heirs do not have. The constitution declares under what circumstances this right shall exist, and excludes the idea that any such right exists if a parent be alive, unless, possibly, in a case in which, notwithstanding the existence of a parent, facts exist which make guardianship of minor children necessary.
It seems to us that the present constitution, instead of giving to minor children an interest in homestead property other or greater that they had under the former laws, in some respects may restrict their rights, and, that duly considered, it emphasizes the rulings under former laws, that no homestead rights descend to them, except as and to the extent this may be given by the express terms of the constitution.
Since the act of January 9, 1843, laws have been in force in this state protecting the widow and minor children of a deceased person in the enjoyment of property exempted to families from forced sale, and through them minors have been protected as against creditors, when both parents were dead. If a mother survived, the rule has been to place the homestead in her possession and under her control, the law presuming that this gave all necessary protection to minor children.
It was never deemed necessary, on the death of a wife, to set apart to the surviving husband and children the community or other homestead; and this is so, for the simple reason that it was supposed the father was able and willing to provide for his minor children, and his sense of duty to them such as to induce him to continue to occupy it and thus protect it from forced sale, as the home of the family, if, in his judgment, it was to the interest of the family that he should do so.
The present constitution gives to the father or mother, surviving, the right to occupy the homestead without reference to the ownership of the fee, and this right either of them may decline to exercise, in which event, the property, under the terms of the constitution, would become subject to partition, if children of the deceased parent take any part of it by inheritance. Adult, as well as minor heirs, would partake in such partition, on equal terms, unless the plain language
The statutes regulating the descent and distribution of real propperty, other than homestead, make no distinction between adult and minor heirs. On partition would the homestead go to the adult heirs, exempted as was it to the deceased parents? This court held not, in Givens v. Hudson, 64 Tex. 471, and we do not see that minor children, under the constitution, can have any right, whatever, in homestead property, other than have their adult brothers and sisters, except as they may indirectly receive benefit through the possessory right given to the surviving parent or guardian, on account of the family of which they may be constituent®.
The declaration of the constitution that the homestead “shall not be partitioned * * so long as the survivor may elect to use or occupy the same as a homestead,” is but the equivalent of a declaration that when the "survivor does not elect longer so to use it, it may be partitioned. The right to partition a homestead, most frequently a single piece of property that may have to be sold for partition amongst heirs, whether minor or adults, or of both, is utterly at war with the continued existence of the homestead, the very necessity for which is founded on the theory of protection to a unity, known as the family, to whose common, undivided use and shelter it is applied.
When the right to partition accrues,- whatever homestead right formerly existed must be held to have ceased, as between the co-owners ; and if it be community property we see no reason to doubt that the survivor may sell it to pay community debts, just as he might any other community property
It is unnecessary to consider how far the rules laid down in reference to the homestead set apart to a widow and minor children under former laws, or vesting in them under act of August 15, 1870, can be applied, under the present constitution, where an estate is insolvent; for the facts of this case do not bring it within these rules. The case of Kirkland a. Little, 41 Tex. 456, has no application to this case. It simply holds, that to give the survivor the general power to sell the interest of a deceased wife in community property, it is necessary that he qualify under the statute; but it does not deny the general and long established rule, that, for the purpose of paying debts, the survivor may sell, without such qualification.
The charge asked by the appellant, and referred to in the second
Reversed and Remanded.
[Opinion delivered March 9, 1886,]