102 Kan. 766 | Kan. | 1918
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an appeal from the judgment of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to the defendant’s answer and cross petition. The litigation arose over the estate of Thomas Breen, deceased, and two appeals have already been taken to this court upon certain phases of the contest. (Breen v. Davies, 94 Kan. 474, 146 Pac. 1147; Breen v. Davies, 99
The only question involved in this appeal is: May a homestead occupied by a childless testator and his wife at the time of his death, and.thereafter occupied by his widow, who elects to take under the law- rather than under the will, be partitioned at the suit of collateral heirs who were never member's of .the testator’s family? We must look to the constitution and the statutes for an answer to the question. Under the constitution the homestead is a grant to the family, and within the meaning of the grant the surviving spouse, although without children, is to be regarded as the family of the deceased owner and entitled to hold the homestead exempt from forced sale under any process of law. The grant has been enlarged to some extent by the statute of descents and distributions, which provides that the homestead which con
The statute of wills provides that “any married person having no children may devise one-half of his or her property- to other persons than the husband or wife.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 11791.) But the widow of the testator, having elected to take under the law and not under the will, is entitled to all the privileges accorded by the statute of descents and distributions, the same as if her husband had died intestate. (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 11798.) By that statute, the family of the deceased owner — the widow and children, and if no children then the widow — occupying the homestead is entitled to hold it absolutely free from distribution under any of the laws of the state. Plaintiffs contend that the constitutional exemption applies only while the owner is living; that the devolution of title is a matter of statutory regulation; and that upon the death of the owner, leaving a will, the rights of the family are to be determined by the statute of wills., It is true that the transfer of title and the distribution of the estate of a deceased person are controlled h.y the statute, and not by the constitutional guaranty of exemption, but it has been expressly held that the constitutional exemption does not end with the death of the owner, but continues as long as the family occupies it as a residence. To sustain plaintiffs’ contention as to the duration of the homestead right, it has been said that it would be “to engrait upon the words of the constitution, ‘shall be exempted from forced sale under any process of law,’ the alien phrase ‘during the
“Our laws have thrown around the homestead every necessary protection for the humane ■ and beneficent use for which it was designed, and no such exception by which the- widow could be divested of it is found in the statute. It would require positive legislation to subject*771 the widow’s homestead to the uncertain tenure of the capricious action of the heirs, whenever they might wish to have a partition or sale of the lands of the estate. There is not only no such provision, .but, as we have seen, the statutes and the nature of the homestead right preclude any such interference with it.” (p. 464.)
(See, also, Keyes v. Hill, 30 Vt. 759.)
It must be held that a homestead occupied by a childless testator and his wife at'the time of his death, and thereafter occupied by his widow, who ejects to take under the law rather than under the will, cannot be partitioned without consent, at the suit of collateral heirs who were never members of the testator’s family.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of the defendant.