15 Wis. 635 | Wis. | 1862
By the Courts
It probably would be admitted that the appellant was entitled to an injunction to restrain . the commission of waste upon the land mortgaged to him, unless it be held that such land is a part of the homestead, and therefore the mortgage void, not being signed by the wife. The complaint states that the value of the land will be greatly depreciated if the timber is taken off, and that the security will be inadequate, and that in consequence of the insolvency of the mortgagor, this mortgaged property is all that the appellant has to resort to, to collect his debt. Under these circumstances, we suppose there can be no doubt that a court of equity would interfere by injunction, and prevent the mortgagor from stripping the mortgaged premises of the timber which constitutes the principal value, unless the mortgage is void for the reason before stated. Ensign v. Colburn, 11 Paige, 503; Willard’s Eq., 370-71. Can then the mortgaged premises be claimed as a part of the homestead ? It appears from the case that the mortgage covers twenty acres of wood land lying about a mile distant from twenty acres of prairie land upon which is situated the dwelling house of the respondent, and where he resides with his family; and that these two parcels of land are all the respondent owns. It- is claimed that while the dwelling house is situated upon the prairie land, which is used and occupied for agricultural purposes, the mortgaged premises are used in connection therewith to obtain fuel, fencing and timber for other farming purposes, in the same manner and to the same extent that they would be resorted to if contiguous ; and that the prairie land, without this piece of woodland, would be nearly worthless for a homestead and agricultural purposes; and therefore that it is a part of the homestead. We deem this an erroneous construction of the homestead law.
Our statute in effect provides that a homestead, consisting of any quantity of land not exceeding forty acres, and the dwelling house thereon and its appurtenances, owned and occupied, &c., shall be exempt from sale on execution; and that a mortgage thereof by the owner — if a married man— shall not be valid without the signature of the wife. Secs.
We are therefore clear in the opinion that the twenty acres of timber land cannot be claimed as a part of the homestead. It is situated at the ^distance of a mile from the homestead, and cannot, in any proper sense, be said to be a part of it. The circumstance that the prairie land or homestead is less valuable for agricultural purposes without the timber land than with it, cannot affect the question. If the wood land is a part of the homestead, it is exempt, or rather the mortgage upon it is void, whether the timber might be useful for wood, fencing or other farming purposes, or whether it would not. This circumstance is quite immaterial in determining the question whether it is a part of the homestead.
In our examination of this subject, we have found a case or two which folly sustain the result at which we have arrived. One is Walters vs. The People, 18 Ill., 194, arising upon a statute substantially similar to our own. It was there held that a tract of timber land a mile distant from the farm or house occupied, yet necessary for fuel for the use of the farm, was not a part of the homestead. On a petition for rehearing, the court affirmed this decision. 21 Ill., 178.
In True et al. v. Estate of Merrill, 28 Vermont, 672, it was held that separate pieces of woodland from which the owner was accustomed to obtain wood for his own use, could- not be regarded as a homestead, or even as a part of it, within the meaning of the statute of that state.
From these authorities, as well as from our own views of the proper meaning and construction of our homestead law, we are clearly of the opinion that the twenty acres of timber
Tim order, therefore, of the circuit court, dissolving the injunction, must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.