31 Minn. 168 | Minn. | 1883
The matter in controversy is the disposition of a farm of 80 acres of land, the homestead property of Harriet E. Wightman, deceased, which, shortly before her death, in 1880, she devised to her father, Joshua Holbrook, who appeals from the judgment' of the district court, adjudging the respondent, Samuel Wightman, the surviving husband, entitled to an estate for life therein. The questions presented are (1) whether, under the present statute, it is in the power of the owner to divest by will the interest of such survivor in the homestead; and (2) what is the nature and extent of the
It was determined in Eaton v. Robbins that by Laws 1875, c. 40, § 2, the right of the survivor to a life-estate in the homestead was not subject to be defeated by the will of the deceased owner. We adhere to this conclusion. Section 3 of the act permits other lands to be devised with the assent of such survivor. But the policy of the law, doubtless for the same reasons that kept dower secure from testamentary disposition, does not permit the estate or interest to be taken away by devise upon any condition. Analogous statutory provisions have received similar construction in other states. In Meech v. Meech, 37 Vt. 414, 418, though the statute as it then stood in terms empowered a testator to devise any interest in lands unconditionally, it was held controlled by the general provisions granting the homestead to the surviving wife and children, and the court say: “The spirit of the act and all its provisions indicate that it was intended that the husband should not have the power by will to devise it away from his wife and minor children.” “As the husband by will cannot defeat •dower, we may well consider that he should not be allowed to defeat the homestead right, which-so much resembles dower.” Thompson on Homesteads, § 544; Runnels v. Runnels, 27 Tex. 515, 519; Succession of Hunter, 13 La. Ann. 257; Schneider v. Hoffmann, 9 Mo. App. 280.
The incorporation of these sections into the statute of 1876, c. 37, (Gen. St. 1878, c. 46,) works no change in their construction in this respect. They are simply additional provisions ingrafted upon the •statute in relation to the descent of land, conveniently arranged in ■the same chapter; that is to say, in addition- to the other provisions -of the statute, section 2 “also” includes this definite homestead provision for the surviving head of the family.
2. The statutes of nearly all the states provide in some form for the transmission of the homestead for the benefit of the surviving
The language of the section under consideration entitled the defendant to hold, for the term of his natural life, the homestead of the deceased, as defined in the statute, free from any claim on account of her debts. The question arises, upon the construction of this language, whether the estate thereby created is an absolute or a conditional life-estate; in other words, whether it is the reservation of a homestead for the survivor and his family, contingent upon the property remaining a homestead and continuing to be occupied as his residence, or whether he is entitled to hold the homestead premises for the term unconditionally, with the privilege of retaining it as his homestead or dwelling-place or not, as may suit his interest and convenience.
In Eaton v. Robbins, 29 Minn. 327, the court favored the former view, and was of the opinion that it was the purpose of the act, for the better security of the family, and to preserve its exempt character as to the debts of the survivor as well as of the deceased, to grant a life interest in the homestead as such, and that, by force of the statute, the homestead of the deceased was transmitted to the survivor, to be held on the condition that it retain its homestead character; and this construction is in harmony with the spirit and policy of the laws of most of the states on this subject. Thompson on Homesteads, §§ 650, 588. But the courts are inclined to place a liberal construction upon the requirement of literal occupancy, so as to favor the beneficial purposes of such statutes. Locke v. Rowell, 47 N. H. 46; Vandiver v. Vandiver, 20 Kan. 501. In the statutes of most of the states, it will be observed, however, that the intention that the right shall pass upon the condition of occupancy is obvious from the language used. Thompson on Homesteads, § 540. But in Vermont, where the statute provides that the homestead shall vest in the widow and minor children, it is held to pass a plenary title.
Upon further consideration of the language and apparent purpose of the act of 1875, in connection with the provisions of the existing exemption law, we-are constrained to say that we deem the construction given to section 2 in question, in Eaton v. Robbins, too narrow. The construction of the provisions of the statute in question was not under consideration in Wilson v. Proctor, 28 Minn. 13. It could not have been intended to create an estate which would be of less practical value to the survivors than the estates abolished, and, in creating the life-estate in the homestead, respect was had to the interests of the family, and the welfare of its surviving head, whose right to continue in the enjoyment of it can be disturbed neither by creditors nor heirs, thus continuing the life tenure of the estates abolished, with absolute exemption from the debts of the deceased, and also exemption from the debts of the survivor upon the condition of occupancy; such survivor thus standing in the shoes of the deceased owner, and having the same right to retain or dispose of his or her estate in the property as such owner enjoyed; the purposes of homestead exemption being as effectually served in one case as the other.
By the language “entitled to hold,” it is intended to pass the entire estate in the subject of the grant for the term. It means the right to possess the property in virtue of a legal ownership, and is not limited to an actual personal occupancy; and unless the term “homestead” in itself implies a condition, the tenure is that of an ordinary life-tenant in the land. “Eighty acres, and the dwelling-house
The family residence or home is thus continued by operation of law to the survivor, and, at his option, may be occupied and held as exempt property, as his or the interests of the family may require; and ordinarily their interests are not adverse. Or it may be leased or disposed of, as in the case of ordinary life tenants. In this way the general purposes of the homestead act may still be secured, without imposing the absolute necessity of occupancy in cases where the interests of the survivor and his family do not require it. Where the owner is the survivor, this is, of course, his relation to the homestead; and it is natural and reasonable that the title by survivorship should be intended to be held in the same way. The fact that the statute confers the right for life only; that it is in the homestead; and that the exemption (from the debts of the deceased) is continued, are the principal reasons in favor of the opposite construction, and their force is admitted; but we think they are outweighed by the considerations we have suggested, and particularly in view of the fact that the homestead may be preserved by the survivor as in other cases. Such survivor is to be deemed the owner of the premises, within the meaning of the homestead law. Wilder v. Haughey, 21 Minn. 101.
As to the other points considered in the case of Eaton v. Hobbins, we adhere to the views therein expressed.
Judgment affirmed.