106 Ky. 744 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion ox the court.
In September, 1894, the appellant, the Louisville Banking Company, obtained a judgment against appellee Anderson, upon which execution issued, which was levied on the property on which he was living. Appellee Price, who was the sheriff, set apart the property levied on as a homestead to Anderson, and the company brought suit in equity against Anderson and Price to vacate the action of the sheriff in setting apart the homestead, and to subject the property to its debt. Service of process was had on Anderson on January 14, 1895, twenty-one days before the court convened. The equity docket was called on the third day of the term, no answer was filed, and the case was submitted for judgment, which was rendered by default on the last day of the term, forty-one days after service of process. On March 29th, Anderson filed his petition in equity, stating and denying the material averments of the company’s petition in equity, averring the grounds upon which he relied in his claim for homestead, and prayed for the vacation of the judgment and a new trial, upon the ground that he was prevented from defending the company’s suit in equity by unavoidable casualty and misfortune, viz.; that he became sick before the commencement of the term, and remained so during the entire term to such a degree that it would have been dangerous to his life to have attended court, on account of the inclemency of the weather and his extreme age. He further averred that he had employed an attorney to represent him, but his attorney was not so advised that he could prepare an.answer without
The case, therefore, presents but two questions:
First — whether a case of unavoidable casualty or misfortune was made out by the evidence*introduced tending to show that Anderson’s counsel were negligent, or whether such negligence on the part of the attorneys must be imputed to the client, and, Second — Whether the evidence introduced upon the trial of the case upon its merits entitled Anderson to a homestead in the property.
It is unnecessary to consider the first question, as the second is decisive of the case.
It appears that Anderson, who was a widower, had formerly owned the property in question, sold it, and re-purchased it in 1892; that in 1893 he rented it to one Browder, retaining part of the house for his own use, and boarded with Browder for the rent of the place; that on August 18, 1894, his daughter, Mrs. Brownfield, came to live with him, and his granddaughter,.the child of another daughter; that he furnished the provisions, and his daughter, assisted at times by his grandchild, did the cooking and other housework.
It is evident that no claim of being a bona fide housekeeper with a family can be based upon the presence of the granddaughter. She was a mere visitor; her parents were living; it appears from the record they were able to provide for her, and Anderson was under no legal or moral obligation for her support.
As said by Judge Holt in Ellis v. Davis (90 Ky., 185 [14 S. W., 74]), speaking of what is necessary to constitute a dona fide housekeeper with a family:
*749 “This court has repeatedly decided that one can not be so regarded, unless there are those living with him who not only bear a dependent relation to him, but whom he is under a natural or legal obligation to maintain.”
And in Bosquett v. Hall (90 Ky., 567, [13 S. W., 244]), it was said: “And accordingly an infant brother or sister, or aged and helpless parent, or even a bastard child, may and have been held to constitute a family in the meaning of the statute.”
And while we do not dispute that a widowed daughter or a daughter abandoned by her husband, might constitute a family within the meaning of the act, we are clearly of opinion that a married woman of full age, between whom and her husband there has been neither an actual nor legal severance of the marriage bond, and for whose support the husband is still both legally and morally bound to provide, can not properly be held to constitute a family of the debtor within the meaning of the statute under consideration. The statute should, and does, receive from this court a liberal construction in favor of the debtor, but to so construe it as to include the case at bar would be a step further than we are inclined to go.
For the reasons given the judgment is reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.