John D. Wineland leased a tract of land in Pieher, Okl., for a term of ten years and erected on it a building, which was used and is being used as a residence for his family and for business purposes. The lease expired. Wineland continued in possession, with the consent of his landlord, under a month to month tenancy. He was adjudged a bankrupt, claimed this property as exempt because it was his homestead, and prosecutes this proceeding to review the referee’s ruling, which denied the claim and held the property to be not exempt.
It is assumed there was proof before the referee of some agreement reserving title to the building in Wineland and giving him the right to remove it. Otherwise, under well-settled principles, the building belongs to the landlord (section 8555, Comp. St. Okl. 1921; Shelton v. Jones,
The claim that this property is exempt as the bankrupt’s homestead must be determined by the laws of Oklahoma, the domicile of the bankrupt. 11 USCA § 24; Vought v. Kanne (8 C. C. A.)
Article 12, §§ 1 and 2, Oklahoma Constitution, and sections 6595 and 6597, Comp. St. Okl. 1921, provide, so far as here material, that, in case the homestead is used for both residence and business purposes, the homestead interest shall not exceed in value the sum of $5,000 (the property here involved is less than $5,000 in value), and the homestead is exempt from forced sale for the payment of debts.
Neither the Constitution nor the statutes attempt to designate or restrict the character of title or interest necessary to support the claim of exemption, nor to define “homestead.” The Supreme Court of Oklahoma, however, has said that the word “homestead” has both a popular and a legal meaning which is identical, that it means the residence of the family — the place where the home is— and was used in the Constitution of Oklahoma with that connotation, McCray v. Miller,
It seems to me that these opinions of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma clearly indicate what the decision in this case must be
*798
and foreshadow the holding that the building in question is exempt as a homestead. • This view is strengthened by the rule that exemption laws are to be liberally construed, First National Bank v. Burnett,
An allowance of the claim of homestead in the instant ease is not without precedent to sustain it, although the constitutions and statutes construed, as might be expected, differ somewhat from those of Oklahoma.
In Hogan v. Manners,
In Cullers v. James,
In Watts v. Gordon,
And see In re Vincent (D. C. La.)
In discussing the steps finally leading to individual ownership of property, Blackstone says: “In the case of habitations in particular, it was natural to observe, that even the brute creation, to whom everything else was in common, maintained a kind of permanent property in their dwellings, especially for the protection of their young; that the birds of the air had nests, and the beasts of the field had caverns, the invasion of which they esteemed a very flagrant injustice, and would sacrifice their lives to preserve them. Hence a property was very soon established in every man’s house and homestall; which seem to have been originally mere temporary huts or movable cabins, suited to the design of providence for more speedily peopling the earth, and suited to the wandering • life of their owners, before any extensive property in the soil or ground was established.”
The homestead provisions of the Oklahoma Constitution and statutes have as their primary object and intention, not the securing of a particular interest in real property, but the protection of the family place of abode, the home. In reason it cannot be said that he who is able to acquire title to realty may have the protection of the law, while he who is unable to acquire such title is denied it. The home does not lose its character as such because of its owner’s lack of wealth or because of the ownership of the property on which it is located. Any other construction of the law frustrates its beneficent purpose and nullifies the obvious intention of the framers of the Constitution. The court should not, under the guise of construing the statute, read into it a condition or provision which the Legislature has seen fit to omit.
The building in question should be set aside to the bankrupt as his homestead under the laws of Oklahoma.
The equipment used by the bankrupt to operate a moving picture show business in the building should also be set aside to him as exempt property, being “tools” and “apparatus” “used in a trade or profession” within the purview- of subdivision 5, § 6595,
*799
Comp. St. Okl. 1921. Bogardus v. Salter,
Counsel will submit a decree accordingly.
