35 Iowa 407 | Iowa | 1872
About the 1st of March, 1857, the defendants owned a homestead in Davenport, of the value of $1,400, on which they resided. At that time the defendant Wales Coe, being called to the pastorate of a congregation at Crawfordsville, Washington county, the defendants purchased the premises in controversy for $800, being fifteen acres of ground in the suburbs of the town of Crawfordsville, with house, stable, shrubbery and fruit
The defendant Wales left money for the making of repairs upon the premises, and went to Davenport for his family, intending upon his return to move into the house if ready for their occupancy, the joiners agreeing to do what they could to have it in suitable condition for use by that time.
Prior to the departure of the defendants from Davenport they shipped all their household goods to Crawfordsville by way of Muscatine and Iowa City, these being at that time the nearest railway stations. Part of the goods, consisting of chairs, sofa, bedstead and stove, preceded the defendants, and were placed in the house on the 15th of March.
The defendants, with another part of the goods, reached the premises about the 1st of April.
Finding the property not in condition suitable for occupancy they took boarding by the week at a hotel near by, and removed there a writing desk, and a bureau to contain their clothing. The remainder of their goods came from time to time, as the condition of the roads permitted, and were unpacked and left in the house. Their horse and buggy were kept in the stable on the premises. The defendants made a garden there and caused part of the land to be sown in small grain. The defendant Wales superintended and helped the joiners. All the members of the family were at the house, more or less daily, and regarded the place as their home. About the last of June, 1857, they moved into the house, and they have occupied it as their homestead ever since.
The plaintiff boarded at the hotel with the defendants, and knew that they were repairing the premises in controversy for a home.
On the 16th of May he advanced the defendants $700,
Under the circumstances was the property in question, at the time of the contracting of the debt named, the homestead of the defendants %
The uniform current of decision in this State is that actual use and occupation of property as a home is necessary in order to impress upon it the character of a homestead. Elston & Green v. Robertson, 23 Iowa, 208; Christy v. Dyer, 14 id. 438; Cole v. Gill, id. 527; Williams v. Swetland, 10 id. 51; Charless & Blow v. Lamberson, 1 id. 435. In the cases which have heretofore been discussed it was sought to invest the property under consideration with the homestead character from the mere i/ntenbion, existing at the time of contracting the debt, of occupying it in the future as a home, and an actual occupancy begun after the debt was contracted. They do not determine what circumstances constitute use and occupation. It is clear, however, that the actual, continued presence of the family is not necessary in order to preserve the homestead character when it has once attached. In Tyffe v. Beers, 18 Iowa, 4, it was held that an absence from the premises of over five years did not divest the homstead character, the a/rmrms revertendi being shown.
In Williams v. Swetland, 10 Iowa, 51, Williams deeded certain lands to Gower. At the time of making the deed Williams lived upon the premises with his housekeeper,
Appellant insists that the burden of proof is upon defendant to show that the property in question is not within a town plat. If this should be conceded this fact is shown prima facie from the evidence that it is situated in the suburbs of the town of Orawfordsville.
The decree is
Affirmed.