58 Iowa 594 | Iowa | 1882
As we understand the record, during all this period from
On the other hand as showing that the plaintiff regarded his removal as something other than merely -temporary, it appears that he voted at all the elections held in Indianola while he resided there, except at an election for an appropriation for a jail. He further testifies as follows: “I have offered to sell the premises in dispute at different times, and if I sold I expected to get another home some place where I could find business. I never was able to sell; the lien of S. Hamil & Co., had something to do with my not being able to find a purchaser. I have never been able to find a purchaser at what I considered a fair price.”
Counsel for appellee urge that when the claimant is in the .actual occupancy of the.homestead at the time the lien or liability is created, the homestead right cannot be lost by abandonment except by proof of the acquisition of a new homestead.
This is not the law of this State. This court has repeatedly held that a party may abandon his homestead and lose his right thereto, and no such qualification of the rule has ever been recognized. It is true it has been held, ast in Davis v. Kelley, 14 Iowa, 525, that stronger proof is required of an intention to abandon the homestead when the lien attached or debt was contracted during its actual occupancy, than when the claimant is not in the actual possession. But considering all this and applying all the facts of this case to that rule, we can scarcely conceive of a more complete abandonment short of a sale and conveyance of the property than is shown in this case.
It is said in Fyffe v. Beers, 18, Iowa 4, that an actual removal from the homestead with no intention to return will forfeit the homestead right though no new homestead be acquired. That case turned upon the fixed purpose and intention to return. In the case at bar, the removal was actual and long continued’; the plaintiff offered it for sale, and repeatedly exercised the right of suffrage elsewhere, and no definite purpose or intention to return is shown. Of course each case must be determined upon its own facts, and as the facts in no two cases are exactly alike, we can be aided but little by precedent.
Reversed.