47 Mich. 619 | Mich. | 1882
The bill in this case is for a partition of lands. The lands consist of a quarter section in Van Burén county, and of two village lots in the village of Paw Paw. On June 13, 1871, John B. Baker died the owner of these lands, leaving Lottie Gr. Baker, his widow, and three children surviving him. The complainant has purchased the interest of one of the children; the other two are minors, and reside with the widow on one of the village lots, which was occupied by John B. Baker as a homestead at the time of his decease, and has been occupied as adiomestead by the widow and minor children ever since. No question of title is made in the case, but the defendants resist partition on the ground that the homestead is exempt from any forced alienation or partition before the youngest of the children reaches majority. The circuit court made a decree that one-third in value of the three parcels be set off to the widow for her life-time as her dower, and that the remaining two-thirds be equally partitioned between complainant and the two infant defendants. The decree also named commissioners to make
As it does not appear to be denied that complainant is entitled to have partition of all the lands except the homestead, and as the proceeding had not so far progressed as to show that the homestead itself would be partitioned or the possession of the widow and infant heirs disturbed, the question may well be made whether defendants have not been premature in their appeal. But as the question whether the homestead is to be considered at all in the partition proceedings is fairly before us, on the present appeal, we shall not be out of the record if we dispose of all the questions which the facts can present.
The questions are new in this State, and our statutes are not sufficiently identical with those to be found elsewhere to make the adjudications of other courts of much assistance.
The Constitution contains the following provisions respecting homesteads:
“ Every homestead of not exceeding forty acres of land, and the dwelling-house thereon, and the appurtenances to be selected by the owner thereof, and not included in any town plat, city, or village; or instead thereof, at the option of the owner, any lot in any city, village, or recorded town plat, or such parts of lots as shall be equal thereto, and the dwelling-house thereon, and its appurtenances, owned and occupied by any resident of the State, not exceeding in value $1500, shall be exempt from forced sale on execution or any other final process from a court, for any debt contracted after the adoption of this Constitution. Such exemption shall not extend to any mortgage thereon, lawfully obtained: but such mortgage or other alienation of such land by the owner thereof, if a married man, shall not be valid without the signature of the wife to the same.
“ The homestead of a family, after the death of the owner thereof, shall be exempt from the payment of his debts contracted after the adoption of this Constitution, in all cases, during the minority of his children.
“ If the owner of a homestead die, leaving a widow but no children, the same shall be exempt, and the rents and profits thereof shall accrue to her benefit during the time of her widowhood, unless she be the owner of a homestead in her own right.” Const, art. 16, §§ 2, 3, 4.
These provisions it is manifest are strictly exemption provisions, and their purpose is to except a homestead not exceeding in value $1500 from the operation of certain rules of law which govern in respect to property in general. Such a homestead shall not be subject to forced sale to satisfy the debts of the owner in his life-time, nor after his death so long as his widow and minor children, or the widow alone if childless, shall occupy the same. Neither shall it be conveyed or mortgaged by the owner, if a married man, without the concurrance of his wife in the act. Fisher v. Meister 24 Mich. 447; Sherrid v. Southwick 43 Mich. 515. In other respects the general law respecting the management, control and disposition of property apply. The homestead right under these provisions is peculiar. It is not strictly an estate; it is merely a right to enjoy the interest of the possessor, or of the deceased husband or ancestor, as against creditors who would take it away, or as against the grantee or mortgagee of a married owner whose wife was not in due form consenting to his deed. Dye v. Mann 10 Mich. 291; Phillips v. Stauch 20 Mich. 369; Comstock v. Comstock 27 Mich. 97; Stevenson v. Jackson 40 Mich. 702. A conveyance cannot be coerced on the basis of a contract made by the husband alone which the wife refuses to perform ; Ring v. Burt 17 Mich. 465; but he may terminate the exemption by ceasing-to occupy the land as a homestead; Bunker v. Paquette 37 Mich. 79; Lamore v. Frisbie 42 Mich. 186; it may be waived by not claiming it in a suit to enforce some inconsistent right; Matson v. Melchor 42 Mich. 477; the widow may deprive herself of it by marry-
But it is nowhere said or intimated in the statute that the widow, or the widow and minor children, may hold land as a homestead to the exclusion of children claiming rights therein as heirs at law. It may be urged that the general purpose to preserve the homestead for family occupation would be inconsistent with partition; but the general purpose as we gather it from the statute and the Constitution is merely to preserve it for family occupation as against any sale for debts, or any sale by the married owner without his wife’s concurrence. Whether the Legislature would have gone further and forbidden the dismemberment of the homestead in partition proceedings if those proceedings had been called to mind, we cannot know, nor would it be material for us to inquire if we could know. It is enough that the case must be governed by the written law, and that the written law fails to provide for the protection the defendants claim. If, however, the question were what law ought to be made, and not merely what law has been made, many reasons might occur to the Legislature for declining to forbid a partition among the heirs. In some cases, where the family of a deceased owner do not remain together as one family, a partition would simply make of one homestead two or more, thereby giving all some advantage from it, instead of leaving it to be wholly appropriated by a part. In some cases partition may be the only way of preventing gross injustice to minor children. Such a case might exist if a widow were to be left with minor children, a part of them her own and a part the children of her husband by a
The defendant Lottie Gr. Baker has a dower right in the land as well as a homestead right, and it would be proper m case of partition to give her the benefit of both these rights in the village lots if she desires it and the value is sufficient. Showers v. Robinson 43 Mich. 502. The homestead should not be severed unless justice requires it.
These views find support in Turner v. Bennett 70 Ill. 263, decided under statutory provisions very similar to those existing in this State.
The decree must be affirmed with costs.