130 Iowa 513 | Iowa | 1906
‘Without attempting to rehearse the pleadings we may state the nature of the controversy as follows: In the year 1895 one Ellen S. Hale died testate, seised of a five-acre tract of land of the value of $1,500, in firm county. By her will, which was duly probated, she devised a life estate in said land to her brother, Edward J. Hale, with remainder over in equal shares to the First Congregational Church, the Home for Aged Women, and the Home for the Friendless, all of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The devisee, Edward J. Hale, took possession of said property and, with his family, consisting of his wife, Elsie J. Hale, and children, who are interveners herein, occupied it as a homestead until his death, July 11, 1903. Said devisee failed to pay the taxes on the property for the year 1896, and for these taxes the property was sold by the county treasurer on December 6, 1897, to the defendant J. M. Terry. No redemption having been made from said sale the treasurer executed and delivered to Terry a deed of said property under date of July 19, 1901. On August 27, 1901, in consideration of a sum substantially equal to the redemption value of the tax purchase, Terry conveyed the land to the defendant William Park, who on the same day conveyed it for a similar expressed consideration to Elsie J. Hale, wife of Edward J. Hale, and to her children, who were all infants. This, it will be observed, was two years before the death of the life tenant and while he and the family were occupying the premises as their homestead. It should also be said that Terry was an old and intimate friend of Edward J. Hale, and that Park is the father of Elsie
We shall not extend the opinion to state the testimony at length. It is enough to say that soon after coming into the life estate Hale began to seek the help of a friend to procure a tax title to the land, and circumstances demonstrate that Terry, an old and intimate acquaintance, was complaisant . enough to serve his purpose. Hale left the tax of 1896, a matter of some twelve dollars, to become delinquent. At the treasurer’s sale Terry, who never before or since purchased a piece of land for taxes, bought it in. Within a few days after the deed was procured he conveyed the property, worth one thousand to fifteen hundred dollars,
It is a general and just doctrine that a person having such an interest in land as would entitle him to redeem from tax sale cannot, by taking a tax title, eliminate the rights of others jointly interested with him in such property. Lane v. Wright, 121 Iowa, 376; Cowdry v. Cuthbert, 71 Iowa, 733; Garrettson v. Scofield, 44 Iowa, 37; Manning v. Bonard, 87 Iowa, 648. That the wife has an interest in the homestead which she is entitled to protect by redeeming from tax sale, there can be no room for doubt. McClure v. Braniff, 75 Iowa, 38; Adams v. Beale, 19 Iowa, 66; Chase v. Abbott, 20 Iowa, 154; Sayers v. Childers, 112 Iowa, 677; Byers v. Johnson, 89 Iowa, 283; Sanders v. Ellis, 42 Ark. 215. The homestead right is created, not for the benefit of the husband or wife alone, but for the benefit of the family, and, as a matter of first impression, it would seem that not only the husband and wife but the children of the family as well should be held entitled to protect their right in the homestead by redeeming from any lien or charge which threatens to deprive them of its shelter. If such be the case, we think it must follow that when any member of the family, occupying and using the homestead in common with other members, acquires a tax title to the common home it should be held to operate as mere payment of the tax, or redemption from the sale and the holder of the apparent legal title
The plaintiffs viere entitled to the relief demanded, and the decree of the district court must be reversed. Decree will be entered in this court if appellant so elects within twenty days from the filing of this opinion; otherwise, the case will be remanded for a decree in the district court. — ■ Reversed.