183 P. 161 | Cal. | 1919
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the surviving wife of deceased from an order denying her petition for a probate homestead out of the only real property owned by the deceased at the time of his death, which was an undivided half of a lot in the city of Sacramento, and was his separate property. The other undivided one-half of said lot was owned by one Buckman. In the year 1898 deceased constructed a dwelling-house on this land. From the year 1899 to the death of deceased in 1917, the premises were occupied by deceased and his wife as their residence, and during all said time deceased had said premises inclosed, and, with his wife, was in exclusive occupation thereof. The learned judge of the lower court concluded that in view of the decisions of this court, a homestead could not be set apart from this property so owned by the deceased as a tenant in common with another person, and therefore denied the application.
[1] Whatever we might think if the question were a new one in this state, it is clear that the general rule to the effect that a homestead cannot be created or set apart from property owned by the husband or wife and a third party as tenants in common or joint tenants is too thoroughly established by a long line of decisions, commencing with Wolf v. Fleischacker,
Appellant's principal claim is that she is entitled to have her husband's undivided half of this property set apart as a homestead by virtue of the provisions of an act entitled "An Act Relating to Homesteads," adopted by the legislature in the year 1868. (Stats. 1867-68, p. 116.) It is probable, as was said in Swan v. Walden, supra, that this act was adopted to modify the rule of decision in this very matter. It substantially provided that whenever a party entitled to a homestead under the laws of the state is in exclusive occupation of any particular tract of land, having the same inclosed, and shall select and record and reside upon the same as a homestead, he shall be entitled to the same to the extent of his interest in the property "although such land be held in joint tenancy, or tenancy in common, or such claimant own only an undivided interest." It may be assumed that if this act is still in force, appellant is entitled to have her deceased husband's interest set apart as a homestead, for it was held under this act in Higgins et al. v. Higgins et al.,
There is no claim that the act of 1868 was expressly continued in force. In title V of part IV of division second of the Civil Code (secs. 1237 to 1269), which was entitled "Homestead," and chapter V, title XI of part III of the Code of Civil Procedure, as originally enacted in 1872, was contained what clearly appears to have been intended as a complete and comprehensive system of laws on the subjects of homesteads. What a homestead consisted of, how and from what it might be selected, when and to what extent it was subject to execution or forced sale, how it might be conveyed, encumbered or abandoned, its value, the rights of parties in the matter of probate homesteads and the manner of setting the same apart — all these things were fully covered by the code provisions. In other words, the whole matter of homesteads was one of the "cases provided for by" the codes. The rule embodied in section
The cases cited by learned counsel on this point are not opposed to our conclusions. None of them involved any act upon a subject as to which, as here, an apparently complete revision was attempted by the codes, and all were decided upon the theory that the act involved was regarding a subject in no way treated in any of the codes. Here, as we have seen, we have in the codes as enacted an apparently complete and comprehensive revision of the law on the subject of homesteads, *21 and the fact that the legislature did not include therein provisions for the selection of a homestead where the circumstances were as specified in the act of 1868 does not render the latter act one as to a "case" not "provided for" by the code.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Shaw, J., Wilbur, J., Lennon, J., Lawlor, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur, but solely on the ground that the question is now determined by the previous decisions of this court. If it were not for those decisions, I believe the rule should be that a homestead may be imposed in the instances provided by the statute regardless of the character of the title of the homestead claimant or his or her spouse, the homestead, of course, affecting only the interests of the claimant or spouse, whatever those interests may be. The only requirement of the statute in this respect is that the claimant be residing upon the premises, and to require more than this and make the validity of the homestead dependent upon the character of the interests affected is without statutory warrant and contrary to the object of the statute. The injustice, I think, is manifest in the present case. It is now too late, however, for this court to reverse its previous decisions, for such reversal would necessarily be retroactive in effect, and would destroy interests and rights acquired in reliance upon the existing decisions. It is hardly necessary to say that this objection would not lie to a change made by the legislature which, of course, would operate only in futuro. *22