47 Iowa 509 | Iowa | 1877
The defendants’ theory is that a town plat means simply the territory of a town, and that the design of the statute is to limit the exemption to half an acre where the land is within such territory. This construction, however, it will be seen, gives no force to the word plat. If the exemption is to be limited to half an acre whenever the homestead is within a town, the idea. would have been better expressed without the use of the word plat. Land is, we think, hot within a town plat unless it is not only within a town but has been platted. A plat is a subdivision of land into lots, streets and alleys, marked upon the earth and represented upon paper. To constitute it such within the meaning of the statute, it must conform to the statute; yet a plat is not made by the legislature, nor by a geographer from an.act of the legislature; it is made by the proprietor, except in a few instances where it has been made by United States commissioners. The legislature, it is true, fixes the limits of municipal corporations within the State, both quasi and chartered, but the territory of the corporations is not thereby platted. Finley v. Dietrick, 12 Iowa, 516.
The larger exemption of forty acres was provided, doubtless, with reference to the needs of those who may be presumed, ordinarily, to rely upon the products of the land for support; but the actual use to which land is put, or the vocation of the owner, cannot determine the question of its exemption; they may vary from year to year. When, however, the proprietor
We are of the opinion that the land in question is not within the town plat within the meaning of the statute, and is, therefore, exempt.
Reversed-