17 Cal. 163 | Cal. | 1860
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
We think, under the circumstances, the mortgage bound the property. The present wife had never occupied the premises. It certainly never was her homestead. The lease itself, made while the defendant was unmarried, deprived the premises of the apparent character of homestead, at least so long as the term lasted.
It showed a purpose of abandonment for a given period, and his sole act at that time was sufficient to create an abandonment, so as to destroy the homestead character. If before any purpose of resuming the occupancy of the premises was unequivocally manifested, and before the last wife had any rights in the premises, he disposed of them to an innocent purchaser, neither he nor she can complain of such disposition. The occupancy of the premises by husband and wife is only an inference of homestead dedication, or a presumption that the property is homestead; but when this occupancy ceases by the act of him whose sole act is effectual to change the homestead nature of the property, no presumption or inference arises that the husband means to resume the occupancy of the premises as the homestead of his family. After the death of his first wife and his disposing of the possession of the property, and the ceasing to use it for a homestead, a purchaser or a creditor might -well consider that it was no longer the homestead of the family; and the mere fact that the husband married again afforded no presumption that he meant to resume the possession, or that his abandonment of the premises or their occupancy was for a temporary purpose.- We see nothing in the other circumstances insisted
The whole case resolves itself into this statement: The husband, after the death of the wife, had a right to dispose of the premises, whether they were homestead or not, at his sole pleasure, by any lawful mode of disposing of real estate; he had a right by his sole will to abandon these premises as homestead; he did apparently so abandon them; while in this condition he conveyed them to the mortgagee. The fact that at this time he was married did not affect the conveyance. The mortgagee was not bound to take notice of this fact, nor is it shown that he knew of it. The mortgagee cannot be charged, in the face of the fact that the premises were in the possession and occupancy of the tenant, with knowledge that the defendant, against the effect of his own deed and against the implied assurance of a right to sell the premises, claimed or was about to resume possession of them as a homestead. The fact of one child boarding with the tenant, or the defendant having furniture there, would not make any difference in the principle— though we do not see this latter fact in the findings.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for a judgment in pursuance of the principles of this opinion.