44 Fla. 782 | Fla. | 1902
This cause being reached for final disposition was heretofore referred by the two qualified members of the court to its commissioners for investigation who reported the same recommending affirmance. Upon consideration of the case, upon the abstracts of the record upon which it has been submitted, by Division A of the court, it finds that the appellants as complainants below filed their bill and amended bills in the Circuit Court of Holmes county,
The abstract of the record is very meagre in its statements of the allegation of the bill, and from these allegations it does not appear with clearness and definiteness whether all of the children of the said J. R. Herrin were living permanently away from him in homes of their own. If any one or more if his children, though having reached their majority, and. though temporarily absent, still retained their status as members of his immediate family, making his home their permanent home as members of his family, we are inclined to think, though without deciding, that J. R. Herrin would still have continued to be the head of a family after the death of his wife, and as such entitled to his homestead exemption, as was held in substance in the case of DeCottes v. Clarkson, 43 Fla. 1, 29 South. Rep. 442. But if the allegations of the bill, as set out in the abstract of the record, are to be construed as meaning that all of his children, having arrived at their majority, had permanently departed from the home of their father, permanently severing their connection with his roof-tree as members of his immediate family and household, and permanently making their homes elsewhere, apart from his parental care, guidance, authority and protection, permanently leaving no one to constitute the’family under the headship of J. R. Herrin but himself and wife, then, upon the death of his wife, the said J, R. Herrin ceased to be the head of a family, and his former homestead lost its status as a homestead under our constitution, and was no longer exempt from forced sale for
Again, the bill makes an indefinite effort to show that the land in question was -the homestead of J. R. Herrin by homestead entry thereof under the laws of the United States, and under such Federal laws were exempt to him, but the bill from this view point also fails to make out a case, because it is wholly silent as to whether the debt forming the basis of the judgment sought to be enforced by sale of the land was contracted prior or subsequently to the land in question.
The decree appealed from is hereby affirmed at the cost of the-appellants.