5 Kan. 592 | Kan. | 1870
By the Court,
It appears from the case made, that the plaintiff in error owned one hundred and two and three-quarters acres of land in the county of Wyandotte; seventeen and one-fourth acres of this land is included in the corporate limits of the city of Wyandotte, and has been since before the adoption of our constitution. The whole tract is irregular in shape, being bounded by ten lines, forming all right angles. If it were cut into two pieces by the city boundary, the line of that part of the country tract abutting upon the city would be one hundred and sixty rods in length. Upon this line beginning eighty rods from one end of the line and ending twenty-two and a half rods from the other, rests the tract inside the city limits; that tract is rect-angular and rectilineal, being forty-eight rods wide by fifty-seven and one-half rods long. The whole tract was allotted to the plaintiff in error and his family as Wyandotte Indians, under the
Homestead Exemption And on this point we think the court below was j-igp-j; an(j judgment must he affirmed. It is not necessary to recite the section of the constitution on which the claim as a homestead rests; it is familiar to all; it makes provisions for homesteads in two classes of cases, “farming lands,” and in towns and cities; the first may be to the extent of one hundred and sixty acres; the last is limited to one acre; in this case all the lands were “farming lands,” and if outside the city, no question would be made ■ as to its exemption from forced sale under execution.
Id : Lands Within a city. But that part within the city has a different limitation; even if the claimant lived on that part within the city, he could hold but one acre as a homestead, exempt from execution, no matter whether it was worth $10 or $10,000,, or whether it was used for farming purposes or was covered all over with a palatial residence. One acre is all that is exempt as a homestead
Thus, but one acre in tbe city would be exempt if be lived on it, and as be did not live on it, of course be cannot claim tbat acre as exempt as a homestead. Such a conclusion preserves all tbe real benefits of tbe homestead, secures the great ends for which it was adopted, and makes all its provisions harmonious, and probably more substantially does justice to all parties than any other. Possibly a reversal of tbe judgment on a different bolding, would be just what tbe plaintiff in error does not want. For if we bold one acre in tbe city as bis homestead, then all bis other property would be subject to a forced sale under execution, for be cannot have two homesteads. We are not insensible of tbe great hardships so forcibly urged by tbe learned counsel for tbe plaintiff in error, attending tbe unnecessary extension of city limits over lands which could more appropriately be used for agricultural purposes, but this is not tbe proper tribunal to correct tbat evil.
The decision of the court below must be affirmed.