63 Fla. 533 | Fla. | 1912
— This appeal is from a decree enjoining the sale of an undivided interest in land under an execution and setting apart the land as the homestead of William Milton.
In Article N of the constitution it is ordained that “A homestead to the extent of one hundred and sixty acres of land, or the half of one acre within the limits of any incorporated city or town, owned by the head of a family residing in this State, together with one thousand dollars’ worth of personal property, and the improvements on the real estate shall be exempt from forced sale under process of any court, and the real estate shall not be alienable without the joint consent of husband and wife, when that relation exists. But no property shall exempt from sale for taxes or assessments, or for the payment of obligations contracted for the purchase of said property, or for the erection or repair of improvements on the real estate exempted, or for house, field or other labor performed on
Judgments or decrees are liens upon the real estate of the defendant in the county where such judgments or decrees are rendered or recorded as required by the statutes. Secs. 1600, 1601,1602, Gen. Stats, of 1906. But no judgment or decree or execution shall be a lien upon homestead exempted property, except for taxes or assessments, or for the purchase price thereof, or for improvements on the exempt real estate, or for house field or other labor performed on the exempt property. Sec. 1, Article X, Constitution.
A tract of land detached from or not contiguous to the land claimed as a homestead is not a part of the homestead exemption. Brandies v. Perry, 39 Fla. 172, 22 South. Rep. 268, 63 Am. St. Rep. 163.
The statutes authorize courts of equity to set apart homestead exemptions and to enjoin the forced sale of exempt property. Secs. 2527, 2528, Gen. Stats. Smith
Organic and statutory provisions relating to homestead exemptions should he liberally construed in the interest of the family home. But the law should not be so applied as to make it an instrument of fraud or imposition upon creditors.
The exemptions from liens and forced sales accorded by the constitution to the head of the family residing in this State do not require the owner of the exempt property to be the solo owner. A coparcener is entitled to possession and such possession may fix the characterof .a homestead claim. And the right of each of the co-owners to have the property partitioned does not affect the homestead rights of each that legally exist and are in good faith claimed. Until partition the right of each to occupy the whole exists; and when partition is made, the rights of each become several and exclusive as decreed or agreed upon. See 21 Cyc. 505, and authorities cited.
It appears that Mrs. Webster owned land on which she died in November, 1910, in Jackson county, Florida, leaving several descendants as her heirs. William Milton, one of her sons, who with his family was living in Washington county at the death of his mother, moved in December, 1910, into the house in which his mother died on her land in Jackson county, and claimed it as his homestead.
On February 1st, 1911, William Milton obtained an injunction against an execution sale of his interest in the land on which he was then living to satisfy judgments' obtained against him prior to his mother’s death. It does not appear when the execution was issued on the judgments, but if this be material, it will be assumed
When Mrs. Webster died leaving to her heirs as such the land on which she resided, the heirs had a right to occupy the land inherited by them and to claim it as their homestead within the limitations prescribed by the constitution. And it -was not necessary for the heirs or any of them to be in actual occupany of the land at the death of the mother to entitle them to occupy and claim the land as their homestead. An occupancy of the land as a homestead by an heir within a reasonable time under all the circumstances will prevent the forced sale under a judgment against the occupying heir of his interest in the land that is lawfully and in good faith occupied and claimed by him as his homestead.
William Milton and his family moved from another county into his mother’s home on the land the month after his mother’s death and claimed homestead rights theuem. He had no other home, and by the occupancy and claim of homestead rights in the lands he inherited from his mother he acquired a homestead status in the lands, subject to the rights of Ms co-heirs to partition of land. Under the circumstances of this case, even if the judgments against William Milton became a lien upon his interest in the lands, they were after his occupancy by virtue of the constitution exempt from the forced sale. See Sec. 2521, Gen. Stats. of 1906; Wildermuth v. Koenig, 41 Ohio St. 180; Letchford v. Cary, 52 Miss. 791.
There is no sufficient showing of bad faith on the part
As William Milton was occupying the land, claiming it in his homestead rights before any active steps were taken to enforce the judgment as to these lands, the discretion of the Chancellor was not abused in assessing the costs against the execution creditor.
The decree is affirmed.