19 Wis. 362 | Wis. | 1865
By the Court,
The first question presented for consideration in this case is, can the creditors of Bennett seize and sell on execution against him land conveyed to him and his wife? This court held in Ketchum v. Walsworth, 5 Wis., 95, that where an estate is granted to husband and wife they
In the case of Jackson v. McConnell, 19 Wend., 178, Cowen, J., says of such an estate :■ “ The husband’s creditors cannoj? take his interest in execution.” He cites to this point Rogers v. Grider, 1 Dana, 242, and Roanes v. Archer, 4 Leigh, 550. We have carefully examined these cases, and it appears to us that they entirely fail to sustain the position. We are of opinion that lands granted or conveyed to husband and wife are held by them as at common law. R. S., ch. 83, sec. 45. It
Eighty acres were sold under the execution; forty of it is claimed as a homestead. What would be the effect upon the sale if this claim is established ? Should the sheriffs’s certificate be set aside entirely, or the purchasers be ordered to release the homestead from the sale, and be permitted if they choose to take a deed of that part of the premises thus released? If eighty acres had been sold on the execution, and the defendant therein had title to only one half thereof, the purchaser (in ease he purchase believing the title to the whole good in the execution defendant, and applied to the court without unreasonable delay) might have had the sale vacated; or, if he preferred, he could take.a sheriff’s deed which would give him title to only one half of what he purchased. We see no reason why the purchasers at the execution sale in this case might not, even if the respondents should prevail as to the homestead, if they so elected, receive a deed of the part not so exempt. It is for the purchasers, not the ’defendant in the execution, to say whether the sale shall be vacated, in case the purchasers could acquire no title to a part of the land sold. It may be that the part to which they get title is worth all they pay. The complaint was evidently not framed with a view to relief on the ground of the homestead exemption; and if the right of such exemption is to be litigated, the complaint should be amended. We therefore do not pass upon that question. We hold that the execution sale was not void or voidable at the suit of the plaintiffs as to the land not exempt as a homestead; that the land, or so much of it as was not exempt as a homestead, was subject to execution; and that the purchasers at the execution sale acquired such title to the premises not so exempt, as would give them the use of them during the life of the husband. If the land was purchased entirely with the
The position that “Childs, Gould & Co. ” is not a party known to the law, and that the judgment in their favor is void, is untenable. If the defendant in that suit desired to take advantage of that defect or irregularity, he should have appeared be fore the justice and made his objection before judgment.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.