143 Minn. 187 | Minn. | 1919
The plaintiff brings this action to restrain the defendant from proceeding with the sale of the premises in question under an execution on a judgment against plaintiff’s grantor, John Ostapchuk. The trial court, after hearing the testimony, found for the defendant and denied the injunction. From an order denying his alternative motion for an order amending the findings or for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
In its decision the trial court found in substance, that during the month of March, 1916, Ostapchuk was the owner in fee of the premises in question, and that on and prior to the sixteenth day of said month he occupied the same with his wife as their homestead; that on that day Ostapchuk shot and killed his wife; that he was immediately arrested and incarcerated in the county jail and there kept until June 2, 1916, when he was tried, convicted of murder and sentenced to imprisonment in the Minnesota State Prison for the rest of his natural life, and has never since, in any way, occupied or resided upon the premises in question; that on March 23, 1916, the defendant recovered a judgment for $64.87 against Ostapchuk, a transcript of which was duly filed and docketed on March 28, 1916, in the office of the clerk of the district court of the county in which the premises were situated; that on May 5, 1916, Ostapchuk executed to the plaintiff a warranty deed of said property, which was duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds on June 3, 1916; that the defendant, claiming said judgment to be a lien upon the premises, caused an execution thereon to be issued and placed in the hands of the sheriff of the county; that the sheriff levied upon said premises under the execution and was proceeding to sell the same when the plaintiff brought this action to restrain him from so doing. Then follows paragraph 6 of the findings, which reads as follows:
“That prior to the execution of said deed, and prior to the recording of same, the said John Ostapchuk had wholly abandoned said property as his homestead, and said property had ceased to be his homestead, and all homestead rights therein had become divested.”
It is the contention of the appellant that the trial court erred in denying his motion to strike out all of paragraph 6 of the findings of fact, for the reason that such finding is a mere conclusion of law; that it is not a finding of any issuable fact and is not supported by the evidence.
As a general rule of law persons under legal disability or restraint or persons in want of freedom are incapable of losing or gaining a residence by acts performed by them under the control of others. There must be an exercise of volition by persons free from restraint and capable of acting for themselves in order to acquire or lose a residence. A person imprisoned under operation of law does not thereby change his residence. Town of Freeport v. Board of Supervisors, 41 Ill. 495; Clark v. Robinson, 88 Ill. 498; Barton v. Barton, 74 Ga. 761; Grant v. Dalliber, 11 Conn. 233.
There was no proof of any act on the part of Ostapehuk, subsequent to the death of his wife, from which a presumption can be drawn that he intended an abandonment of his homestead. His absence therefrom while under detention in the county jail raises no such presumption. To constitute an abandonment there must be an actual removal from the premises. An intention to remove is insufficient. Robertson v. Sullivan, 31 Minn. 197, 17 N. W. 336. The premises in question was the homestead of Ostapehuk at the time of his arrest, and remained his legal
In the present case it is conclusively established that Ostapchuk was occupying the premises with his wife as their homestead at the time of her death. Nothing having occurred thereafter to indicate a purpose on his part to abandon the homestead, it is held, that the premises continued to be his homestead until the conveyance thereof to the plaintiff, and that defendant’s judgment did not become a lien thereon.
Reversed.