75 Wis. 361 | Wis. | 1890
We are quite clear that the homestead right attached to the premises which the plaintiff John Chopin purchased of Edwards. He took'possession of these premises, built a house upon them, which he occupied with his family for years, and, if he did consent to their being leased for a period, this was for a temporary purpose and the exemption was not impaired by that act. It is said b}^ the learned counsel for the respondents that Chopin did not acquire such an interest in the premises under the contract as would constitute them a homestead. This position -we deem clearly untenable. The exemption extends to any estate less than a fee held by a person, by the express lan
It is further insisted by the same counsel that the evidence shows that the. wife was the real owner of the premises, and that, being her separate estate, she had the absolute right to dispose of them or incumber them as though unmarried. There is certainly testimony to sustain that view; but still we think the established facts show that- the husband purchased the premises from Edwards for himself; that he had the equitable interest, under the contract, and was the real‘vendee. It is probable that the wife furnished the money to make the first payment on the contract. She so testified. But the contract was not in her name, nor do-we think she was the real purchaser. The husband must be deemed the owner of whatever interest was acquired under the Edwards contract, and the case will be considered in that view.
Now, upon that assumption, what must be paid the respondent to entitle the appellant to a conveyance from him of the premises? The circuit court held that, under the arrangement which the evidence showed the parties had made, the respondent held the premises as mortgagee for the amount of $876.85, which the plaintiff must pay in order to be entitled to a conveyance. This sum is made up of the amount due on the contract, and what John Chopin owed Edwards when the latter conveyed the premises to the respondent, and what the respondent paid material-men and for some improvements on the house and barn, together with some taxes, and interest on these various items of indebtedness. So far as the homestead right is concerned, the respondent stands in substantially the place
The reason for this conclusion is founded on the statute itself, which secures to the wife and children the home
It is said that, as to the materials and labor furnished and rendered for the construction of buildings upon the premises, there is a paramount equity that they should not be subject to the homestead exemption but should be a lien upon the property. But that point was directly ruled the other way in Spear v. Evans, 51 Wis. 42. There, by an agreement between A. and B., A. advanced moneys to enable B. to purchase and improve land, and took the legal title from the government as security for such advances. B. always claimed to hold the land under this contract, and made a payment as late as 1875, and acknowledged and promised to pay the indebtedness in 1878. ITe afterwards married. In the opinion it is said: “It seems that Evans intermarried with Caroline, one of the respondents, in May, 1853, before the final payment on the land in December of that year, and- a very large part of the money which went into improvements was evidently furnished after that time.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case is remanded with direction to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion.