103 P.2d 14 | Colo. | 1940
IN 1928 plaintiff in error obtained a judgment against defendant in error, Rose G. Day, and James L. Day, her husband which remains unsatisfied. In 1937 Mrs. Day became the owner of real property in Jefferson county which she declared to be her "true home and homestead" for that she "did cause the word `homestead' to be entered in the margin of the record title to the * * * real estate." She and her husband lived on the property so entered until his death in 1939 and she and an adult son have continued to live thereon since that time. After the death of the husband plaintiff in error levied upon the property and Mrs. Day asserted her claim of exemption because of the homestead entry. The trial court sustained the claim.
The regularity of the homestead entry is admitted as is the fact that the property was exempt as a homestead as long as the husband lived. The position of plaintiff in error is that when the husband died the property lost its character as a homestead and may be levied upon by the wife's creditors, for she has become a single person and is not the head of a family within the provisions of section 23, chapter 93, '35 C.S.A. Defendant in error asserts, however, that under section 26 of that chapter the homestead continues to exist. This section reads: "When any person dies seized of a homestead, leaving a widow, or husband, or minor children, such widow, or husband, or minor children, shall be entitled to the homestead; but in case there is neither widow, husband, nor minor children, the homestead shall be liable for the debts of the deceased." *196
[1, 2] Plaintiff in error argues very earnestly that the words "When any person dies seized of a homestead" precludes Mrs. Day's claim, because, since Mrs. Day was the owner of the property, her husband was not "seized" of it when he died. This position would have merit were we to give to the word "seized" its precisely technical, feudal meaning. It cannot, however, be so construed as used in the act under discussion. Our duty is to give the statute a liberal construction, to the end that its purposes will be fulfilled. Barnett v. Knight,
Let the judgment be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE YOUNG and MR. JUSTICE KNOUS concur. *197