57 Iowa 745 | Iowa | 1882
“L. Hurst and wife, Margaret, left their homestead, described in the application herein, on the —th day of September, 1877, for a temporary absence, and after a few week’s traveling, kept house and abode in Parsons, in the State of Kansas, until they both died, the doctor going into the drug business at that place, and voting and becoming a citizen there. The date of his intention to become a citizen, or of his citizenship there, does not appear. Nor does it appear what knowledge Margaret Hurst had, or that she had any knowledge, of the doctor’s intention to become, or the fact of his becoming, a citizen of the State of Kansas. She did not intend to abandon her homestead described, or to become a permanent resident of Kansas, or to change her residence from the State of Iowa, and intended her stay away from the homestead to be but temporary.
L. Hurst, deceased, died without applying for, or having his share in fee, or any share in the premises described, admeasured, and same never has been set off to him in severalty, but he was, after Margaret Hurst’s death, appointed guardian of the persons and property of the defendants and, at the time indicated by the clerk’s certificates, filed the papers and petitions hereto annexed as exhibits “A.”
The papers referred to show that L. H urst filed a petition in the proper court, which was sworn to in Kansas, stating that the defendants, his wards, inherited a two-thirds interest as heirs of their mother, Margaret Hurst, and that it would be to their interest to sell the said interest. Such an order was asked and granted. Mrs. Hurst died in Kansas in September, 1878, and her husband in January following.
The statute provides “upon the death of either husband or wife the survivor may continue to possess and occupy the whole homestead until it is otherwise disposed of bylaw.” Code, § 2007. “The setting off of the distributive share of the husband or wife in the real estate of the deceased shall be such a
As no such setting apart was made the homestead descended to the defendants at the death of their father, exempt from “any antecedent debts of their parents or their own.” Code, § 2008.
Affirmed.