7 Kan. App. 39 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The principal question in this case, going to the merits, and presented by counsel in their briefs and arguments, is whether the property involved in the suit was exempt to the principal defendants — the Hudsons — as a homestead.
The defendants in error contend that the court ought got to consider the merits of the case because the record is insufficient; that the case made is indefinite, incomplete, and does not purport to be the record or copies of records of anything upon which this court can base a review. Counsel are mistaken in this. The record contains the pleadings and the special findings
The second specification of error is that the court erred in concluding that the mechanics’ liens were prior to the judgment liens of the plaintiff in error, and in adjudging that the proceeds of the sale of the property involved, after the mechanics’ liens were satisfied, should be distributed among the judgment creditors pro rata. This directly involves the question whether the land was a homestead or not, and also presents the question of the respective rights of the judgment lienors. The third specification of error is that the court erred in not adjudging the plaintiff in error to have a first lien upon the property. And the fourth is that the court erred in not sustaining the plaintiff’s, motion for a new trial.
The action was tried at the March term, 1894. After adjudging the several amounts due to ’the lienors against the‘Hudsons, as well as against Myers, the contractor, the court held that those lienors should be first paid out of the proceeds of the property; and if there should be any residue after paying them, it should be distributed among the judgment creditors pro rata; that the Hudsons were not entitled to hold the proceeds of the sale against the judgment creditors after the mechanics’ liens were satisfied. So it will be seen the court not only held, in effect, that as between- the parties claiming liens for work and the material furnished in the construction of the house
In support of the liens of material-men and mechanics, it is contended that the property is exempt because it was bought by the Hudsons with the express intention of making it their home ; because they proceeded to prepare it for a home by the erection of buildings thereon ; and because the jury found that, at the time of the trial, the Hudsons had not abandoned their intention of making the property their home, notwithstanding it had never been occupied as a home by them. Had the Hudsons ever perfected their homestead right by an actual occupation of the property, this contention might be sustained, under the authority of cases in our supreme court.
In the case of Ingels v. Ingels, 50 Kan. 755, the supreme court says:
“ Where city lots are purchased for a homestead, in order to preserve a debtor's right to the homestead exemption he must actually occupy the same as a residence within a reasonable time after the purchase, and where a debtor fails to so occupy, and fails to make any preparation for occupancy for a period of two years and five months after such purchase, he •cannot defeat the judgment lien of a creditor merely*44 by showing that he has always intended to occupy said lots as a homestead. The constitution and statute require actual occupancy in order to preserve a homestead right. Occupancy after levy of execution does not change the rights of the parties.”
While it is true in this case that there was preparation made by the parties for occupying the property within two years, or within a few months after the-purchase, yet they never occupied it at any time.
In the case of Gilworth v. Cody, 21 Kan. 702, cited by counsel for defendant as sustaining their view that the property was exempt by reason of these preparations having been made, the court, in reciting the facts, says that Cody purchased the property in controversy in that case on the 1st of December, 1877; that he at once began to dig a cellar and haul stone for a dwelling-house thereon ; that on the 5th of December, 1877, he started to a neighboring town to-purchase material to erect a dwelling-house, and returned with the materials on the 7th, and continued the construction of the house and completed it on the 28th of December, 1877 ; that an attachment was levied between the 7th and 28th ; that on the completion of the house he at once moved his family into the-dwelling, and has since occupied the dwelling by himself and family. Under these facts, the court helcL that the property was exempt; that occupancy as a homestead was initiated at the time of the levy of the attachment by the fact of the presence of the defendant at work upon his dwelling-house, which was completed by his actual occupancy within twenty-eight days from the purchase of the land. Had the Hudsons in this case occupied the property at all before the commencement of this suit there would be some reasonable ground for the contention.
Under the findings of the jury and of the court, it cannot be said, in the light of the decisions of the supreme court in construing the homestead law, that this tract ever became the homestead of the Hudsons. If it was not the homestead of the Hudsons, the judgment lien of the plaintiff in error attached thereto as soon as the Hudsons acquired title. This was a month or more before the contract was made with Myers under which the lumber was furnished, and before the work was performed for which the mechanics’ liens are claimed.
The words ‘ ‘ either of them ’ ’ are sufficient to indicate that the legislature intended a lien to attach to the buildings independent of the land itself. This construction has been placed by other states upon similar statutes. In some of the states the details by which this separate lien is worked out are more specific in the legislative enactment, but such intention is no more clearly expressed. And we conclude that under the provisions of this statute the material-men and mechanics had a prior lien upon the building erected by them. It can be worked out either through a finding of the court as to the respective values or separate appraisement of the buildings and land, under the direction of the court, and an award of the amount pro rata to each lien-holder from the proceeds of a sale in solido. While the judgment liens attached to the land prior to the commencement of
The judgment will be modified so that it will give to the plaintiff in error a first lien and to Helen T. Oheever a second lien upon the land for the amount of their respective judgments remaining unpaid; and to the mechanics and material-men a first lien upon the building ; and the district court will ascertain and determine, from proofs to be offered by the respective parties, the value of the land, and the value of the building erected under the Myers contract, separately, and direct a sale of the property in solido, and distribute the proceeds to the respective parties pro rata according to such valuation.
The costs in this court will be divided between the parties.