30 Wash. 51 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In this cause the administrator filed a petition asking an order for the sale of real estate to pay debts and expenses of administration. Objections to the making of such order as to 150 acres of the land described in the petition were interposed. The particular land involved under the objections is described as 150 acres of the northeast quarter of section 29, township 24 north, range 2 east, situate in Kitsap county, Washington. The grounds of objection to the order of sale, substantially stated, are as follows, viz.: That Hattie Eeas died in August, 1892; that said property was acquired, from the Hnited States by Abraham S. Eeas, while he was the husband of the deceased, Hattie Eeas, and was until the time of the death of said Abraham S. Eeas, which occurred March 21, 1899,-in his actual possession as a homestead for himself and minor children, and that the same has at all times been exempt from all debts and liabilities of said estate; that said Abraham S. Eeas, in March, 1895, after the death of his said wife, and while residing upon said land with his minor children, filed with the auditor of Kitsap county a declaration of homestead upon the land;
The court found that the land did not exceed in value the sum of $1,000 at the time of the death of said Hattie Feas, and that said Abraham S. Feas continuously resided upon the land, and made it his home, from 1883 until his death in 1899, and had at all times living with him minor children of himself and said Hattie Feas. This property was the community property of Abraham S. Feas and his wife. It was occupied as a homestead at the time of the wife’s death. The community estate passed into administration after the death of the wife, and it is under that administration that this order of sale was made. It is urged by respondent that the declaration of homestead filed by the surviving husband in March, 1895, was of no effect because the law of 1895 providing for filing such declaration was not yet in force. Prior to the law of 1895
“The latter act in no way affects the provision in relation to the time of making the selection, but simply undertakes to direct the manner of such selection, and the provision that such homestead may be selected at any time before sale is still in effect.”
Thus, under the law existing in March, 1895, the surviving husband, being in occupancy of the land as a home with his minor children, thereby asserted claim to it as a homestead, and the written declaration which he filed became positive and confirmatory evidence of such fact, although no law then required him to make and file such formal declaration. If, then, the surviving husband could claim a homestead, it was sufficiently done.
It is urged that a surviving husband cannot claim a homestead in the community interest of his wife after her death. It is undoubtedly the intention of the present law to authorize either the husband or the wife to make such claim while both are living. § 5244, subd. 1, Bal. Code. When selected from the community property, the homestead vests in the survivor upon the death of either
It is contended in support of the order of sale in this case that at the time it was sought to subject this property to sale there were no minor children, and that the property had been abandoned as a family residence. We do not think, however, that such facts constituted an abandonment of the homestead. There were a number of minor children when the homestead was claimed as such, and there was never any abandonment thereof by the father. It is true he conveyed it to his children, but that was not an abandonment. Our law provides for a conveyance of the homestead, and to make such conveyance effectual the grantor must have the privilege of leaving it and establishing his residence elsewhere after it has been so conveyed. Moreover, under the law of 1895 a homestead can be abandoned only by a declaration to that effect,- duly executed and acknowledged. § 5220, Bal. Code. While Abraham S. Feas held this land as a homesteád free from debts of the community estate, he conveyed it to his children, who in turn have conveyed it to their sister, the objector here. The grantees of Mr. Feas took the land as he held it free from obligations of the estate. Carrie M. Feas, their grantee, holds it likewise, and it is not, therefore, subject to sale for debts of the estate.
For these reasons we think the order of sale was er
Reavis, O. J., and Fullerton, Mount, Anders, Dunbar and White, JJ., concur.