79 Tex. 99 | Tex. | 1890
This case presents principally questions of fact, or rather of mixed law and fact. The judgment, execution, levy, and sale vested the land in suit in appellants if at the time of the levy and sale it was subj'ect to forced sale, but if it was the homestead of the plaintiff, Fritter, no title passed by the sale, The levy was made on February 9, 1888, and on March 6, 1888, the land was sold and bid in by the appellants.
The residence of appellee is on the east side of lot 4; lot 5 adj'oins lot 4; both lots foi-m a square survey fifty-five varas on each side. There is a fence running through the lots northward and southward, and west of the fence is the land in controversy, on which are an old house once used as a store house, and a rock house twenty by thirty feet in dimensions. Cook Alley lies east of the property and Forth Street to the west. The facts upon which the homestead claim rests are stated in the testimony of Fritter, the appellee. The testimony is not lengthy, and we will set it out in full. He testified that “he was a married man and the head of a family. He purchased the lots for a homestead and had lived upon them since 1868; "had been engaged in the mercantile business up to 3874 or 1875, when he failed. He occupied' the old picket building, marked on the map ‘store’ (next to the ‘store restaurant’), for a dry goods and grocery store. After he bought lot 5 he erected thereon the rock store house, in which he run a barroom until the latter part of 1874 or the early part of 1875. The fence across the lots was erected over eight years ago. Since he failed he has never occupied either of the store buildings as- a place of business. He had them constantly rented out when he. could get a tenant for them, and used the rent derived from them for the support of his family. He at all times used the open lot in the rear of the: store to put his horse and buggy in. Some of the tenants after he failed had exclusive control of vacant parts of lots in rear of the building, using the same in connection with the rented store as a wagon or camp yard. The buildings are now occupied by tenants, and have been occupied by those who are now in them for nearly a year, and I have always rented them ever since I went out of business whenever I could get a tenant.
“The house marked on the map ‘shop’ belongs to Mr. Herzing; permitted him to put the house there at his own expense and with the right to remove -it when he wanted to. He pays me ground rent, $2 per month. The whole property was not worth $5000 at the time I went on it, and is not worth over $2000 now. I would take $2000 for the whole property at
This evidence falls short of proving that the houses levied on constitute any part of the homestead, either as business homestead or as part of the residence homestead. They had not been used as a place of business since plaintiff failed in 1874 or 1875,- and the evidence does not tend to show that plaintiff ever intended to resume business and occupy them for that purpose. The evidence tends to show that the houses were held to rent, and not to use as a part of the residence for its enjoyment and for the convenience of the family. The houses had been rented for about fourteen years, all the time when a tenant could be found to take them. They were used when not rented to store things in, and it may be for the convenience of the family, but this was evidently a temporary use. It was evidently not the intention to permanently so use them, but rather to rent them.
Plaintiff seemed to think that if he kept them rented and used the proceeds of the renting for the support of his family they would be protected from forced sale as homestead property. This supposition was incorrect. The mere use of the rents to support the family will not create or maintain a homestead right. It was not the intention of plaintiff to permanently use the houses as a homestead. They were not adapted to such use. We can not hold with the court below on this question. The houses were not homestead property. Medlenka v. Downing, 59 Texas, 32; 57 Texas, 678; Wynne v. Hudson, 66 Texas, 8; 63 Texas, 13.
The evidence of use of the open space on the lots is sufficient to make it a part of the homestead. It was used as a horse lot, wood yard, etc., in connection with the residence, and though it, or some of it, had been sometimes rented, and the exclusive use of it surrendered to a tenant for awhile, it did not lose its homestead character by such temporary rent
The ground on which the shop stands was not exempt as a part of plaintiff’s homestead. Plaintiff allowed Herzing to put the house there at his, Herzing’s, own expense, with the privilege of moving it when he, Herzing, saw fit, paying S3 ground rent. This was not a temporary renting. It does not appear when the lease is to terminate, if ever; not does it appear that plaintiff can terminate it at all. It can only terminate by act of the tenant. In such case the ground on Avhich the shop stands can not be protected as a part of plaintiff’s horse lot or Avood yard. Of course this opinion can not affect the rights of the tenant under his agreement with plaintiff to use the ground or to move the shop. We intend only to say that the levy and sale conveyed such interest in the shop and premises as were vested in plaintiff at the time of the levy.
Our conclusion is the judgment of the lower court should be reversed and rendered in conformity with the views expressed in this opinion.
Reversed and rendered.