This is a dispute over the ownership of a house and surrounding land located at 3-5 Hillside Avenue in the City of Barre. The contending parties are plaintiff, estate of Sydney Girard, and certain relatives of Sydney Girard (defendants) who claim title under a deed from Sydney Girard to his parents, Francis and Patricia Shepard. The Washington Superior Court awarded title to defendants. We affirm.
The parties stipulated to the facts in this one-issue case. Girard purchased the property from his grandparents in 1975. Shortly thereafter, he married Sharon Houle, and they took up residence on the property. A son, Jonathan, was born in 1979. The couple separated in 1979, however, and neither Sharon nor Jonathan ever again lived in the Barre premises. A year later, Girard conveyed the property to his parents by his sole deed, but he continued to live on the property until May of 1986. Through later transfers, record title to the property ended up in Girard’s aunt, Justina Laird.
In 1982, Girard and Sharon Houle divorced. The final order, which was based on a stipulation between the parties, provided that “[t]he real property at 5 Hillside Avenue, Barre, Vermont, belonging to [Girard] is awarded to [Girard], subject to debts presently on this property.”
Girard died in 1990, and his former wife and son opened an estate. They made a formal demand that Justina Laird convey the Barre property to Jonathan. When Justina Laird refused, this suit ensued. 1 Plaintiff’s claim is that the Girard deed to his parents was void because Sharon Houle did not join in it to convey her homestead interest. Because it was void, they argue that the property remains in Girard’s estate and passes to his heirs. 2
The trial court found that conveyance from Girard to his parents was made without the required participation of his wife Sharon but that the defect made the conveyance only voidable *510 by Sharon. Because Sharon failed to void the conveyance before the divorce, and she lost all interest in the property in the divorce, the court held that the conveyance was no longer voidable. Accordingly, it awarded summary judgment to defendants.
The parties agree that there are no disputed issues of fact, and the case was properly decided by summary judgment. Plaintiff renews here its argument that Girard’s deed was void, and the property remains in the estate. Defendants rely on the trial court analysis, adding that Girard was estopped to contest the validity of his deed. Both agree that the controlling statute is 27 V.S.A. § 141(a), which provides:
§ 141. Execution and acknowledgement of conveyance (a) A homestead or an interest therein shall not be conveyed by the owner thereof, if married, except by way of mortgage for the purchase money thereof given at the time of such purchase, unless the wife or husband joins in the execution and acknowledgment of such conveyance. A conveyance thereof, or of an interest therein, not so made and acknowledged, shall be inoperative so far only as relates to the homestead provided for in this chapter.
The statute is part of the remedial scheme to protect home ownership from loss to creditors, to conserve family homes and to “‘save [families] from disintegration and secure their permanency.’” Mer
cier v. Partlow,
As plaintiff emphasizes, we have generally held that under § 141(a) a deed to a homestead property, executed by only one
*511
spouse, is void ab initio for noncompliance with the statute. This rule was clearly stated in
Martin v. Harrington,
The cases indicate two rationales behind the
Martin
rule. The first is that it is commanded by the words of the statute. That is the primary rationale expressed in
Abell v. Lothrop,
The second is that the statute is intended to protect not only the spouse who did not join in the conveyance but also the spouse who made the conveyance. Martin reasoned:
The statute protects the [owner of the] homestead against any attachment by a creditor, although he has no *512 wife nor children. Considering the object of the statute that it is to preserve a home for the family it is not unreasonable to hold that it is as much for the benefit of an aged housekeeper, a demented octogenarian, with no means of support, as it is for the benefit of a young widow, just out of her teens, who may have a competence in her own right.
The homestead act was to protect the husband as well as the wife and this construction is not a strained one for we can have in mind that “Courts often do accommodate the provisions of a statute to cases which they were obviously intended to cover although not well suited to accomplish.”
Although we concur with plaintiff that the
Martin
line of cases, never overruled, supports its argument that the Girard deed was void ab initio, we note that our precedents are not in a straight line. More recently, the issue arose in
Cole v. Cole,
Cole
is not the first deviation in the line of cases.
Martin
itself had to overrule
Whiteman v. Field,
*513 Defendants urge us to rely on Cole to hold that the Martin line of cases is inapplicable in these circumstances where the wife’s homestead interest has been terminated by divorce. We conclude that such a rationale would leave the law in a state of confusion, relying on distinctions without differences. We choose to reach the same result by overruling Martin and its progeny and reinstating the rule announced in Whiteman. 3
We adopt this approach because we find that the
Martin
rule leads to unnecessary injustice and that neither of the rationales supporting its adoption are valid. The main rationale is the plain meaning rule of statutory construction, see
Venman v. Patrissi,
*514 The choice of words has significance in light of the nature of the homestead interest of the spouse who does not own the property. As explained in Cole:
The homestead right is a right to be set out of the estate of the husband or head of the family and is treated as an exemption of so much of his estate as is included within it, for the benefit of his widow after his decease. It does not become a fixed and definite estate in the land until it is ascertained and set out. Before it is ascertained and set out, it is nothing more than a contingent or inchoate right — a conditional lien or encumbrance — upon the estate of the husband in favor of his wife.
The homestead interest vests no title during the lifetime of the husband but is only a contingent and inchoate right which, if not released or otherwise barred, may be enforced if the wife survives him.
We find the alternative rationale for the
Martin
rule even less persuasive, especially where creditors are not involved.
Martin
involved a certain leap of logic in holding that a statute that invalidates the husband’s deed when not joined by the wife, while validating it if the wife joins, is intended to protect the husband. Nor was the logic aided by references to others, for example the “aged housekeeper,” who might reside in the homestead. While there may be gaps in logic, however, the effect of the decision was to prevent collection by a creditor who “knew he did not receive” a valid mortgage.
Martin,
In a conveyance case like the one before the Court, the effect of
Martin
is to defeat the desires and expectations of the very persons we are protecting. This effect was most pronounced in
Ellingwood,
where the
Martin
rule was applied to defeat a conveyance of the homestead property from husband to wife, os
*515
tensibly made for the purpose of protecting the wife. In response to the obvious injustice caused by the rule, the Court answered that the statute makes no distinction for cases intended to benefit the wife but is intended to protect the husband also.
We are called upon again in this case to defeat expectations for the purpose of protecting the person with the expectations. Girard voluntarily conveyed the property to his parents, and through subsequent conveyances it stayed in his family. His parents paid the purchase money mortgage while he lived on the premises. Even after his wife was aware of the transfer, she voluntarily and specifically relinquished all interest in the homestead property in the divorce proceeding. It is inescapable that application of the Martin rule to this case will visit an injustice on innocent persons for no defensible reason.
Finally, we note that the law on which plaintiff relies was developed in the nineteenth century and has not been reexamined in modern times. The original purpose of the homestead exemption was the “conservation of family homes.”
Mercier v. Partlow,
We do not lightly overrule settled law especially where it involves construction of a statute which the legislature could change at any time. We also recognize that the
Martin
rule has
*516
been adopted in most other states in this country, see 2 Patton on Land Titles § 399, at 211-12 (2d ed. 1957), although a few .jurisdictions have reexamined it in modern times. One court which has reexamined the rule in recent years has abandoned it. In
Speck v. Anderson,
To guard the homestead right jealously in order to vindicate and effectuate the purposes of the constitutional and statutory expression of our citizens’ concern for the security of the family is certainly a task that the judiciary should not shirk. When these purposes have been accomplished, however, to permit the assertion of the homestead exemption to be raised by those who have no rights under the homestead exemption statutes would be to arm with a sword those who need no such weapon.
Id.
This is not an area where legislative silence alone should be taken as an endorsement of the
Martin
rule. See
Boys Markets, Inc. v. Retail Clerks Union,
When a rule of law lacks justification in legal principles or reason, our duty is to overrule it no matter how long it has been embedded in our jurisprudence. See Traynor,
Reason
*517
ing in a Circle of Law,
56 Va. L. Rev. 739, 744-46 (1970). Such rules “tend to discredit the law [and] should be readily rejected.”
Rothberg v. Olenik,
Affirmed.
Notes
After the demand was made on Justina Laird, defendants made a claim on the estate, asserting protection under the covenants of warranty contained in the deed from Girard to his parents. That claim is pending in probate court awaiting the outcome of this suit.
The dispute relates only to that part of the Barre property which is homestead. Plaintiff argues that the property is entirely covered by the homestead exemption because the value at the time of the invalid conveyance in *510 1980 governs and that value was well below $30,000, the maximum amount protected by the homestead exemption. See 27 V.S.A. § 101. As evidence of its position, plaintiff points out that in 1989 the property was sold to Justina Laird for $30,000. Because of our disposition of the case, we do not reach this argument.
Defendants have not asked us to overrule Martin, relying instead on Cole. Although we have frequently reached results for reasons different than those argued by the parties, we necessarily must be careful in overruling past precedents without the benefit of the parties’ advocacy. In this case, the parties were asked at oral argument to address whether the Martin line of cases should be overruled, and they did so. In their briefing on the effect of Cole, they have addressed the merits of the possible rules. We reach this result sua sponte because of our obligation to develop and explain the law of . Vermont for its citizens who rely on and use it. See Tate, Sua Sponte Consideration on Appeal, 9 Judges J. 68 (1970), reprinted in R. Aldisert, The Judicial Process 731 (West 1976) (to prevent injustice courts frequently consider sua sponte grounds for decisions).
