201 Wis. 313 | Wis. | 1930
Since 1914 plaintiff’s husband, Charles G. Larson, has owned and occupied as a homestead and farm all of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 25, excepting about six acres which constitute a railway right of way through the middle of the forty-acre tract, and a triangular parcel of about seven acres in the northeast
On April 9, 1925, judgment in favor of the defendant in this action was entered against Charles G. Larson and became a lien on his unexempt land. On April 9, 1926, execution was issued on that judgment, and payment demanded of Charles G. Larson. A sale Under that execution was noticed and advertised, to the knowledge of Charles G. Larson and the plaintiff in this action, of Charles G. Larson’s lands, with the exception of his portion of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 25; and upon that sale the 6.53 acres in controversy in this action were sold, and thereafter conveyed by sheriff’s deed to the defendant herein. After that execution sale Charles G. Larson, on June 6, 1926, conveyed to the plaintiff herein the 6.53 acres in controversy, and also all other land which he owned, excepting his holdings in section 25.
The learned circuit judge found, in connection with the facts hereinbefore stated, that at the time of the levy and sale Charles G. Larson “apparently did not consider said parcel a part of his homestead forty;” and upon all the facts concluded that the parcel in controversy was not part of the homestead of Charles G. Larson or of the plaintiff, and not exempt from seizure and sale on execution; and that under such sale the defendant herein became the owner thereof, and was entitled to judgment quieting its title, free and clear of all claims of plaintiff.
Sec. 272.20, Stats., so far as here material, provides:
“A homestead to be selected by the owner thereof consisting ... of any quantity of land, not exceeding forty acres, used for agricultural purposes; . . . and the dwelling house thereon and its appurtenances owned and occupied by any resident of this state shall be exempt from seizure or sale on execution, from the lien of every judgment ... to the amount in value of five thousand dollars, ...”
“It is a cardinal rule, which this court has frequently recognized and affirmed, that exemption laws are to be liberally construed. The whole policy and spirit of the law, so far as homesteads are concerned, are to secure them to the debtor and his family.” Krueger v. Pierce, 37 Wis. 269, 271.
“The homestead exemption law, above quoted, was enacted pursuant to the mandate of the constitution, and there*317 is no reason to doubt that the legislature thereby intended fully to execute such mandate. By such statute, therefore, the legislature intended to exempt to every debtor in the state the homestead which he owns and occupies, with a specified quantity of land appurtenant thereto, without regard to the uses to which he puts such land or the business he pursues upon it. All that is required is that it be his homestead, and the statute was intended to protect the owner in the enjoyment of it.” Binzel v. Grogan, 67 Wis. 147, 151, 29 N. W. 895.
All of the land which Charles G. Larson owned in section 25, or the legal subdivision on which his dwelling and appurtenances were situated, consisted of only about twenty-eight acres. If Larson’s holdings in the legal subdivision on which his dwelling was located had consisted of precisely forty acres, then, in the absence of an expressed selection, indicating an intention to include contiguous land, located in another legal subdivision, in lieu of part of the forty acres which constituted a legal subdivision, Larson would be held to a tacit selection of those forty acres constituting the legal subdivision on which his house stood. Kent v. Lasley, 48 Wis. 257, 4 N. W. 23; Martin v. C. Aultman & Co. 80 Wis. 150, 49 N. W. 749. However, as his holdings within the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 25 consisted of but twenty-eight acres, and as the 6.53 acres in section 36 were contiguous along a common boundary line of 597 feet, and were used in common with almost half of the adjoining twenty-eight acres as a pasture appurtenant to the other part of the twenty-eight acres, on which the buildings were located, the physical situation, relative location, and actual use and occupation of the 6.53 acres, in connection with the adjacent twenty-eight acres, constitute a tacit selection of the contiguous 34.53 acres as the homestead exemption, in the absence of an expressed selection to the contrary. When tracts of land not exceeding in the aggregate, in quantity and value, the homestead exemption are
When the validity of the right to exemption does not depend upon the assertion or giving notice thereof to any one at any particular time, it is immaterial that the claim to the land as a homestead was not asserted until the commencement of the action to set aside the execution sale. Hoppe v. Goldberg, 82 Wis. 660, 665, 53 N. W. 17.
For the reasons stated the judgment must be reversed, with directions to enter judgment setting aside the certificate of sale and sheriff’s deed to the 6.53 acres in section 36, and adjudging title thereto to be in plaintiff, free and clear of all liens and claims thereon by virtue of the judgment recovered by the defendant against Charles G. Larson on April 9, 1925, in the circuit court for Price county.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, with directions to enter judgment in accordance with this opinion.