72 P. 343 | Cal. | 1903
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff after demurrer overruled to the complaint and defendant's refusal to answer. The object of plaintiff's action was to quiet her title to the lands described in the complaint against the mortgage executed by her to defendant Geiser. The complaint alleges that while plaintiff and Theodore Lange were husband and wife, the husband purchased the property in question. Thereafter the husband declared a homestead upon the property, after which he conveyed it to his wife. Following this conveyance, she alone executed the mortgage to the defendant Geiser. Subsequent to all these acts and transactions the Langes were divorced, but the decree made no disposition of the land impressed with the homestead.
The trial court decreed the mortgage to be void. Upon this appeal no question is raised as to the character of the title thus acquired by plaintiff, but the contentions are based upon the concession that her title is good. These contentions are, — 1. That the title acquired subsequent to the mortgage inures to the mortgagee as security for his debt (Civ. Code, sec.
As to the first proposition, it is the settled law of this state that neither spouse can alienate or encumber the homestead without the joint act of the other, and that the effort so to do is a nullity, and will not be validated by a subsequent dissolution of the marriage or termination of the homestead.(Gleason v. Spray,
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
McFarland, J., Van Dyke, J., Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.