118 Mo. 357 | Mo. | 1893
— This was a suit between the heirs of Joshua Lewis for the partition of real estate. He died leaving a wife, three children by the first and six by the second marriage. The defendant, Henry W. Lewis, the sole appellant, is one of the children of the last marriage. He insists that the property in question was the homestead of his father, that upon the death of his father the title passed to his mother, and at her death to her children, to the exclusion of the children of the first marriage. On the other hand the plaintiffs insist that the question whether the property was the homestead of deceased* is not open to review, because of a failure of the defendant to file a motion for new trial at the proper time, or even at any time.
The facts bearing upon this preliminary question are these:
The case was tried at the July term, 1890, of the circuit court. The court then made a decree of partition, and at the same time ordered the land to be sold and the proceeds to be distributed according to the rights of the parties as found and set forth in the decree. The following proceedings were had at the February term, 1891. On the seventeenth of that month the sheriff filed his report of sale; on the nineteenth the defendant filed “exceptions to the report of sale/’ assigning, among others, the following reasons: Fourth. Because the court erred in not deciding the law as prayed by this defendant at the trial of the cause. Fifth. Because the court erred in declaring the law on the part of the plaintiffs as prayed by them. Sixth. Because the sheriff has not reported the names of the parties correctly.
On the twenty-fifth of the same month the court
The first inquiry is whether this motion filed by the • defendant and denominated ‘ ‘exceptions to the report of sale” should be treated as a motion for new trial; for, if not so treated, the appellant is here without such a motion. This motion, it will be seen, complains of the action of the court in declaring the law at the-trial. Indeed one only of the eight alleged errors goes to any act of the sheriff in making this sale, ■and that is the sixth. All the other objections go back to alleged errors committed at the trial of the cause. The motion does not, it is true, pray for a new trial, but the objection therein stated that the court erred in declaring the law, if well taken, must result in a new trial. Disregarding the name given to this motion, it is in substance and effect a motion for new trial. It .seems to have been so treated by the parties in the circuit court, for there was no effort made to strike it from the files, or to strike out any part- of it. We think the motion should be treated here for what it is in substance and effect, that is to say, a motion for new trial.
The next question is whether the motion was filed .at the proper time. The order of the court confirming the sale, or, what is the same thing, directing the payment of costs arid the distribution of the money in the hands of the sheriff, is the final order from which •an appeal lies. Murray v. Yates, 73 Mo. 14; Turpin v. Turpin, 88 Mo. 338; Holloway v. Holloway, 97 Mo. 639. The order of the court confirming the report of sale in ■this case was made at the February term,'1891, and it
But it is again insisted that it was filed out of time, because filed five or six days before the order of confirmation was entered. A motion for new trial must be made within four days after final judgment, and usually it is not filed until after such judgment is-, pronounced, but it does not follow that it must be disregarded because -filed earlier than the practice' requires. It was certainly good and sufficient to-preserve errors committed at and prior to the time when it was filed; and hence good to preserve the rulings of the court in giving and refusing instructions..
The facts disclosed on the trial are to the following; effect: In March, 1868, the land in question was owned by one Robertson. Henry W. Lewis, son of the deceased, rented it from Robertson for one year from March 1, 1868, and went into possession as the tenant of Robertson.
Joshua Lewis, the deceased, owned and resided upon another parcel of land, the same being his homestead. In November, 1868, Joshua Lewis and Robertson exchanged lands, and the deeds were then made consummating the exchange. Each parcel was within the homestead limit, both as to quantity and value.. At the date of these deeds, Joshua Lewis intended to-move to and reside upon the land so acquired of Robertson as soon as he recovered from his then sickness. He died on the twenty-first of January, 1869, some two-months after the date of the exchange deeds. He was-still living in the old homestead at ,the time of his-death, and had not removed to the Robertson land because of his continued sickness. He left his second wife surviving, but no minor children. This Robertson land was all the land he owned when he died.
Henry W. Lewis, the tenant of Robertson and son
It is not necessary to set out the instructions given- and refused. The question presented by them is-whether, under the circumstances just stated, the property in question was the homestead of Joshua Lewis at, the time of his death. He had-never been in the actual occupancy of it, but it stands conceded that he-exchanged a homestead for it, that he intended to-remove to and reside upon it, and this intention was only defeated by his death occurring two months after the exchange of properties.
Actual occupancy is necessary to create and bring into existence á homestead exemption •, and ordinarily an unexecuted intention to move upon and occupy property is not sufficient to create such exemption. But in this case wé are not dealing with an original acquisition of a homestead. It stands conceded that-the deceased- had acquired a homestead which he-exchanged for a new one. Says Thompson: ‘‘Exceptional circumstances may arise, however, where theunexecuted intentions of the claimant may be construed, into the legal equivalent of actual occupancy of the premises claimed. As when the statute authorizes a change of homestead, by sale and .investment of the proceeds in a new place of residence, the rights of the owner may be preserved as against existing creditors during the occurrence of the change.;; Thompson on Homesteads and Exemptions, sec. 247.
Hnder our statute, a housekeeper or head of a. family, having a homestead, may acquire a new one with the consideration derived from the sale or- other-disposition of the old one, and the new homestead is exempt as to all debts to which the old homestead
It necessarily requires an interval of time to move from one place of residence to another. In < view of this fact, and to carry out and give effect to the policy of the law in allowing one homestead to be exchanged for another, and to giving the claimant all the homestead rights in the new one that he had in the old, a reasonable time must be allowed to accomplish the change of residence. What will be a reasonable time, must, to a great extent, depend upon the circumstances of the particular case.
In this case the deceased was sick' at the time he exchanged his then homestead for the Robertson property. The Robertson property was then in possession of the son of the deceased. The fact is conceded that deceased intended to move and reside upon the property acquired from Robertson, and this intention becomes important in this case, for it shows beyond doubt that the deceased in making the trade simply exchanged one homestead for another. The intention of the deceased to move upon the newly acquired property was defeated only by his continued illness. Under these circumstances the property -received in exchange for the old homestead must be deemed a new homestead. To hold otherwise, is to disregard the object and purpose of the law, and defeat rights which the law gives to the widow.
The property being the homestead of the deceased at the time of his death, the title passed to his surviv