206 P. 782 | Mont. | 1922
prepared the opinion for the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment dissolving a temporary, and denying a permanent, injunction.
November 15, 1921, appellant Clara McCarthy, plaintiff in the district court in this case, made and caused to be recorded a homestead declaration for agricultural land, selecting as her homestead: “All her interest and equity in and to the hereinafter described lands and premises, being an undivided one-half (%) interest and equity in and to the following described lands, to-wit: The south half of the southwest quarter (S.% SW.14), the west half of the southeast quarter (W.% SE.14), and the east half of the southeast quarter (E.% SE.14) of section four (4) township eighteen (18) north of range eight (8) east, Montana Meridian, Judith Basin county, Montana, containing two hundred forty (240) acres; according to the government survey thereof returned to the General Land Office by the Surveyor General; together with the dwelling house and all other improvements thereon and appurtenant thereto; said land, dwelling house and other
In another paragraph of said declaration it is alleged: ‘ ‘ The undersigned, Clara McCarthy, claims as homestead an undivided one-half (%) interest and equity in and to the above-described land and premises; the actual cash value of said undivided one-half (%) interest and equity in and to said land and premises, together with the improvements thereon, is twenty-four hundred ($2400.00) dollars; that she makes this selection and declaration of homestead for the benefit of herself and her said husband, under and in conformity with the provisions of the statutes and laws .of the state of Montana, and in particular under and in conformity with sections 4719-4722, Revised Codes of Montana, 1907.”
These are all the portions of said declaration necessary to be considered on this appeal.
November 23, 1921, respondent Matilda Lindsay, defendant in the district court in this proceeding, obtained a judgment against said Clara McCarthy, for an amount in excess of $3,000, and procured the issuance and levy of a writ of execution upon the interest of said homestead claimant in the real estate described, the defendant C. H. Kelley, as sheriff, making the levy. Thereupon, the claimant, Clara McCarthy, as plaintiff, commenced this action against Matilda Lindsay and the sheriff, as defendants, seeking to enjoin the sale. In the district court, all of the issiies were conceded in favor of the plaintiff, the homestead claimant, except the defendants allege in their answer that the declaration of homestead is void in that the claimant attempted to declare a homestead upon an area greatly in excess of that allowed by law. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants in the district court, and plaintiff appeals therefrom.
Section 4 of Article XIX of the Constitution of Montana provides that the legislative assembly shall enact liberal home
Thus, we find that under opr Homestead Law, as- interpreted and construed by this court, a failure to accurately set forth the value of the premises claimed as exempt, does not invalidate the declaration, but the provisions defining the area must be strictly followed, and that the homestead exemption is a statutory right which can be secured only by complying strictly with the requirements of our state legislature, as expressed in our law relating to homesteads. (Yerrick v. Higgins, supra.)
May, then, an owner of an undivided one-half interest or equity in 240 acres of real estate declare a homestead upon all of his interest or equity in the 240 acres, and what is the effect of such a declaration? It is manifest at once, from a statement of the question, that an area is attempted to be exempted as a homestead greater than 160 acres—the amount contemplated by the statute. The statute expressly declares, with reference to agricultural land, that the homestead may be selected and claimed, consisting of any quantity of land not exceeding 160 acres. (Sec. 6968, Rev. Codes, 1921.) If the declaration in this case is valid, then an area greater than 160 acres may be claimed as a homestead, which is expressly inhibited by the plain provisions of the Homestead Law. Plaintiff, to sustain her contention, must take the position that a homestead may be claimed upon any interest or equity, however slight in amount or degree, and regardless of the area over or through which it extends. If plaintiff’s contention is true, then one owning an undivided one-tenth interest in 1,600 acres could claim the same as a homestead. In fact, the area which might be selected would be unlimited, so long as the claimant had some interest therein, however slight.
But counsel for plaintiff assert that the intent of the legislature was to give a homestead exemption upon the “in
The plaintiff relies upon the case of Brown v. McLennan, 60 Tex. 43, in support of her contention. This is the only case cited by plaintiff as bearing directly upon the question at issue here. The Texas court held that the homestead right of one having an undivided interest in a tract of land exceeding 200 acres in quantity or area is not confined to the undivided interest in the 200 acres, but extends to an undivided interest of 200 acres in the entire tract, following an earlier decision of that court. (Jenkins v. Volz, 54 Tex. 639.) This case- was decided, in 1883. The statute relating to homesteads in force at that time in that state (Art. 2336 of the Revised Statutes of Texas 1879), did not require a declaration of homestead to be made and recorded before the homestead right could be initiated, and the homestead could be in one or more parcels. It is evident that the statute construed in the Texas case is not similar to our Homestead Act, as there is no provision in our law providing that the homestead may be in one or more parcels.
In the case of Lewis v. White, 69 Miss. 352, 30 Am. St. Rep. 557, 13 South. 349, the homestead claimant was the owner of, and claimed as his homestead, an undivided one-sixth interest in two tracts of land containing 721 acres, and alleged that his one-sixth interest in the whole area was less than 160 acres, the number of acres which he was entitled to hold as a
If it was the intention of the legislature to give a homestead exemption to the interest or equity, then we must explain the reason for putting any restriction upon the area at all. If we construe the statute to mean an interest may be claimed in an area exceeding 160 acres, then we nullify the provision limiting the area to 160 acres. It may be just as consistently argued that a claimant may exempt 320 acres, for the reason that each 160 acres thereof has a value of only $1,250, or that a homestead of 320 acres may be claimed as exempt, upon the ground that the total value does not exceed
Counsel for plaintiff urge that the court should grant equitable relief and provide a remedy by which her homestead interest may be preserved, but, as heretofore pointed out, the plaintiff has no homestead right, equitable or- otherwise, to preserve, aso she has not followed the statutory procedure in making her declaration. We are of the opinion that the plaintiff, homestead claimant, attempted to claim as her homestead an amount of real estate considerably in excess of that allowed by section 6968, Revised Codes of 1921, and thereof the declaration is void.
We recommend that the judgment from which this appeal is taken be affirmed.
Per Curiam: For the reason given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.