53 Miss. 610 | Miss. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
Joshua Birmingham died in 1867, seised and in possession of a quarter-section of land, on which he resided. Mary A. Birmingham is his widow; but he left surviving no child or children, nor descendants of a deceased child. Since the
The rights of the parties are governed by the act of 1865, to “ amend the exemption laws.” Pamphlet, p. 137.
The first section “ exempts from seizure and sale under execution or attachment to the head of every family, . . . being a housekeeper, two hundred and forty acres of land, ... so laid off as to include thereon the dwelling-house and other buildings,” &c.
No controversy can arise in this case, as in Lessley v. Phipps, 49 Miss. 790, as to whether the Code of 1857 or the act of 1865 applies as to the quantum of the exemption, the contestants not being creditors. The third section of the act provides that all the property, real and personal, exempted by the provisions of this act, upon the death of the husband, shall descend to the widow, as the head of the family during her widowhood, for the use and benefit of herself and children, &c. The heirs-at-law insist that, since there are no children, the estate did not and could not take the course of descent, as provided in this section; but the property lost its peculiar character as a homestead, and descended under the general law to the next of kin, subject to the widow’s dower.
The earlier statutes gave to the widow, on the death of the husband, the exempt personal property. In the interpretation of these statutes it was held that the property vested directly in the widow; that she did not take through the administrator, as does the distributee ; in reality, it constituted no part of the decedent’s estate for purposes of administration. Coleman v. Brooke, 37 Miss. 71; Whitley v. Stephenson, 38 Miss. 113, 115. The act of 1860 changed somewhat the destina
It has been uniformly ruled, under the several statutes, that the rights which the widow acquired were in no wise dependent upon or affected by the question of whether she had a separate property of her own. That subject is only to be considered as affecting the quantum of interest which she would take in the husband’s estate through the administrator, or subject to be administered. But the exempt property, both real and personal, is excepted from the operation of the general statute of descents and distributions, and passes to the several beneficiaries, after the death of the exemptionist, as designated in the statute regulating that special property. In Hardin v. Osborne, 43 Miss. 532, 536, the precise question was as to the character and extent of the interest of the widow in the homestead after the husband’s death. It was ruled that she took a life interest, not to the exclusion of the children, if there were any, “ but for the use and benefit of herself and children.”
Both the act of 1860 and that of 1865 devolve the exempt property upon those who succeed to it, not on the condition that they continue to reside upon it, under pain, if they or any of them cease to occupy, that the creditors of the deceased husband may seize and sell under judgment liens ; but it goes to them utterly liberated from all claim of or liability to such creditors.
The statute does not make the right of the widow dependent on the fact of whether there are children of the decedent surviving him, but was designed to limit and circumscribe her right, if there were. If there are children, they share with her in the enjoyment of the property during her life or widowhood. If there are no children, she takes a defeasible life estate, remainder in fee to the heirs of the husband.
The same view was taken by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky of the statute of that State passed in' 1866, analogous to
We are of opinion that the widow, in this case, under the third section of the act of 1866, took a life estate in the entire tract of one hundred and sixty acres, subject, however, to be defeated by her marriage. Upon the termination of that estate the land would descend “ as other property descends by the laws of this State.” The heirs-at-law show no right to interrupt Mrs. Birmingham in the enjoyment of that estate.
If she should choose to have dower assigned, the effect of that proceeding would not be to limit her right under the third section of the act of 1866. It might have serious results as to the destination of one-half the tract on her death, since her dower would extend to one-half the property in fee-simple. But on that subject we pronounce no opinion.
We reverse the decree and dismiss the bill, but without prejudice to the complainants.