24 Wash. 172 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This appeal is from a decree of the superior court of Pierce county in the matter of the distribution of the estate of Algernon S. Austin, Jr., deceased, husband of appellant, wherein the lower court found the property here in controversy to have been the separate property of said deceased, and distributed it as such. Algernon S. Austin, Jr., died intestate in Pierce county, October 6, 1898, leaving a widow and infant child; also two grown children by a former wife. On October 28, 1898, appellant was appointed as the administratrix of the estate of deceased, and thereafter proceeded in due course of law to settle up the said estate. Hpon the hearing of the petition for final accounting and distribution of the estate, appellant claimed lot 8, block 524, of Central Addition to the city of Tacoma, as a homestead for herself and min- or child, and asked that the same be excluded from the distribution and set aside to her as such homestead. The court denied the homestead claim, and from a decree distributing this property as the separate property of deceased appeal is taken.
The first question presented here is whether or not this property was the separate property of deceased. The record discloses the following facts: That deceased for several years prior to his marriage to appellant, which occurred January 1, 1890, had been engaged in buying and improving real estate and selling the same; that at the time of his marriage he had realty in and about the city of
In the course of the administration of the estate appellant obtained an order of the court setting aside the above-described property as a homestead, and appellant' now insists that this order of the court was conclusive of the rights of the heirs to the same and fixed the status of the property as the homestead of appellant. This contention is based upon §§ 6219 and 6222, Bal. Code. These sections cannot be held to vest the fee to such homestead in the widow, irrespective of the claims of other heirs. They exempt such homestead from the payment of any debts, whether community or individual, and authorize the court to set aside the use thereof for a limited period to the family of deceased. The order of the court could do no more. These sections must be read and construed in connection with § 33 of the Acts of 1895, at page 114, being § 5246, Bal. Code. By this section, if the selection had been
The cause must be affirmed, with costs against appellant in her own proper person and not against the estate.
Reavis, O. J., and Fullerton, Dunbar and Anders, JJ., concur.