30 Tex. 604 | Tex. | 1868
This was an “agreed case,” submitted to
In 1855 some creditor of D. Messner recovered a judgment against him in the Washington district court, which seems to have slept quietly (or at least it was not active and efficacious) till September, 1859, when execution issued. It was levied upon the premises. The land was sold by virtue of said execution in October of the same year, and was bought by the appellant for the sum of $65: property which it is agreed was worth $6,000. The sale was forbidden at the time, because it was the homestead of the appellees.
The above facts, with the pleadings in the cause, were submitted to the district court, and judgment was given
We think we might safely rest this case, with the judgment of the court below, upon the authority of the decision in the case of Taylor v. Boulware, 17 Tex., 74. It is rare that two different cases have such striking points of parallelism or similarity. But since the rendition of the judgment in the court below, and the filing of the transcript in this court, the defendant, D. Messner, has departed this life, and the question is raised whether the law requires that his administrator should be made a party. The lis mota in this case is the homestead of the appellees. From the peculiar laws of 'Texas, both constitutional and statute, the administrator has nothing to do with the homestead. The constitution protects the homestead against the claims of creditors, and the laws of administration prescribe that the estate of the intestate descends immediately to the heirs at law, but gives the administrator, through and by the action of the probate court, control over the realty, only for the purpose of paying the debts of the intestate. The administrator of the deceased appellee is, therefore, no necessary party in this suit.
Questions are, however, raised in this cause, as to the effect of the act of incorporation of the town of Brenham upon a rural homestead lying contiguous to the village, used and enjoyed as a homestead at the time it was incorporated within the extended limits of the town, and as to the liability of such homestead, thus incorporated, when it exceeds $2,000 in value, to the payment of the demands of creditors. These are grave and serious questions, deeply affecting important and sacred interests, which the government, in the formation of its organic law, evinced its great solicitude to shield and protect. In securing the object contemplated by the framers of the government, it becomes the duty of the courts of the state to scrutinize all acts of legislation which may tend in any degree to affect or defeat the
By direct act of legislation, the legislature of this nor of any other state, acknowledging the restraint of constitutional law, forbidding the disturbance of vested private rights, would undertake to declare as homestead, anywhere in the country, an incorporated town or city, without the assent of the owner, and subject it to special taxation and burdens, in addition to the common charge incident to all
Hothing appears in the agreed case to show that D. Messner, the head of the family, gave his express assent to the change of his rural to a suburban homestead. Possibly, this express assent, had it been given by him, might have given some color of justice to the view insisted upon by the appellant; as the husband or head of a family, who has the power of disposition of the community property, in acquiring, by his own act, a new homestead, exposes his old one to the rapacity of his creditors, if such he has. But, even in =this case, it is very questionable whether it
There could not be, in this case, any implied assent of the husband to the extension of the limits of the village of Brenham, the inhabitants of which were authorized, under the act, to incorporate themselves into a town; for he was not an inhabitant of the village at the time, living on the one hundred acres originally donated, and laid ofi into streets, lots, and blocks; and there is no circumstance upon which a presumption of that implied assent could he founded. Hence, we conclude, that the legislature itself could not work this metamorphosis of a rural into a suburban homestead, without the consent of these peculiar words of the constitution; much less could the local municipal corporation of Brenham do so; pnd, certainly, we do not feel inclined, by any judicial interpretation, to achieve a result so repugnant to the letter and spirit of our domestic constitution.
The judgment is, therefore,
Affirmed.