78 Mo. 649 | Mo. | 1883
This is an action of ejectment, begun in 1879, by Robert Canole, a minor, by guardian, to recover of defendants a tract of land in Howard county containing 28 65-100 acres, more or less. Ouster laid on tbe 20th day of August, 1878. Tke answer tendered the general issue.
The ease was tried on the following agreed statement of facts: That John Canole, at the time of his death, was seized in fee and possessed of the tract of land described in plaintiff’s petition; that said John Canole left a widow, Mary Ganóle, and a minor child, Robert Canole, the plaintiff;
The order of the court setting out such homestead was here read in evidence, in words and figures following, to-wit:
“ Mary Canole against David Pipes, administrator of the estate of John Canole, deceased. In the Howard county court, February 9th, 1870. David Peeler, John Walker and William H. Settle, commissioners, appointed at the last term of this court to set out to plaintiff' a homestead, present their report, and it appearing to the court that the tract of land described in the petition and in the said report filed, was valued by said commissioners at $860, and that sum is less than the value of a homestead allowed by law, and that said commissioners have set out the whole tract as a homestead for said plaintiff and her child, Robert Lee Canole, according to the provisions of the statute in such cases, it is, therefore, ordered by the court that the report of said commissioners be, and the same is approved and confirmed and ordered to be recorded, and the tract of land described therein set .out to Mary Canole and Robert Lee Canole as a homestead, according to the statute aforesaid.”
It was further admitted that the defendants were in possession of the land in controversy at the commencement of' this suit, and are now in possession, and that the value of the monthly rents is $5. There was no other evidence.
The question for discussion arising on the agreed statement of facts has not been directly decided in this State, though the principle involved has, in effect, been settled. The homestead claim represented arose under the statute of 1865. The fifth section of the homestead act reads as follows:
“ If any such housekeeper or head of a family shall die, leaving a widow or any minor children, his homestead, to the value aforesaid, shall pass to and vest in such widow or children, or if there be both, to such widow and children, without being subject to the payment of the debts of the deceased, unless legally charged thereon in his lifetime; and such widow and children, respectively, shall take the same estate therein of which the deceased died seized; provided, that such children shall, by force of this chapter, only have an interest in such homestead, until they shall attain their majority, and the probate court having jurisdiction of the estate of such deceased housekeeper or head of a family, shall, when necessary, appoint three commissioners to set out such homestead to the person or persons entitled thereto.”
Erom this section one thing is clear to my mind, and that is, the legislature did not intend to secure the privileges and benefits of the homestead exemption and estate to any other person or persons than the widow and minor children of the “ head of the family” who died seized of such homestead. The manifest object was to preserve to the head of the family during his life the enjoyment of the home property as a means of shelter and protection, as also a means of better securing the. unity of the family. Its further purpose was, upon his death, to devolve the estate upon his widow and minor children just as he held it, and for the same beneficent end — that of keeping his widow and dependent children together by affording to them a common shelter and a common source of subsistence.
True, it is that under this statute the widow took in fee, and at her death the fee title would descend to her heirs and not to her husband’s. Skouten v. Wood, 57 Mo. 880. So that if at the time of her death there had been no minor child of the husband, no doubt but her children, whether of lawful or unlawful wedlock, would take the estate, in fee, as of the mother, as tenants in common.
But where there is a minor child, as in this case, of the father from whom comes the homestead, while, the fee title is in the widow, the minor child is entitled to hold with her during the minority, and neither she nor those claiming under her, can oust or resist the right of possession of such minor.
Judge Napton, in Skouten v. Wood, supra, while the point was not directly involved, nevertheless expressed his view of this question as follows: “ Supposing her death to occur before the minor children (where there are any) attain majority, it would be a serious question as to where the title goes; but I suppose it would go to the surviving minor children and on their majority to the heirs of the deceased.” By the expression “to the heirs of the deceased” he meant, evidently, the heirs of the deceased widow. In that case the court held, that as the section in the statute of 1865, under consideration, was copied from the homestead law of the state of Vermont, the legislature adopting it are supposed to have been familiar with the construction placed upon the act by the supreme judicial department of that
The practical operation of an effort to enforce the rule contended for by appellant will demonstrate its invalidity. It will not, I presume, be contended by the learned counsel for plaintiff in error, that the death of the mother termi
The construction of this act must, therefore, be that the right to hold and enjoy the estate was in nowise interrupted by the death of the widow. The first child, during its minority, holds not by inheritance but by virtue of the homestead law. And as the absolute fee, which the widow took, was burdened with the homestead interest and right of the first child, and as the after-born child is not claiming, nor indeed can claim, any right under the homestead act as such, but solely by the law of descent from the mother, it takes an interest in the fee, but burdened with the paramount right to the possession of the first child during its minority. "When the first child shall have attained its majority the homestead estate will be at an end, and both children will then, and not before, as heirs of the common mother, take from her the estate in fee as tenants in common.
It follows that the conclusion reached by the circuit court was for the right party, and its judgment is affirmed.