Sayers v. Childers

112 Iowa 677 | Iowa | 1901

Ladd, J.

After Mrs. Littleton began to occupy the dive-acre tract of land as a homestead it was taken within the <city limits of Des Moines. But it had never been platted, .and was not included in a plat, so that, under section 1996 ■of the Code of 1873, it did not lose its character as a homestead. But this was repealed by the Code, October 1, 1897, providing that, “if within a city or town, it must not exceed one-half acre in extent.” Section 2978, Code. The only material change from the law as it previously stood was in the omission of the word “iffat” immediately after “town,” and this was restored by chapter 119 of the Acts of the Twenty-Eighth General Assembly. See Finley v. Deitrick, 12 Iowa, 517.

*679Did this change in the statute diminish the homestead of Mrs. Littleton to a half acre ? By section 51 of the Code, the repeal of existing laws was not to “affect any act done, any right accruing or which has accrued or been established.” In the early case of Helfenstein v. Cave, 3 Iowa, 288, the court held the homestead right to be such a one as was contemplated in a like statute contained in the Code of 1851, .saying: “Now, under the act of 1849, a right existed in the defendant in relation to this contract, — that is, a right to his homestead, if he had one, — and this right is saved by the repealing chapter of the Code. The intention of the Code, adopted in 1851, was to save all rights existing under former acts, even to the extent of those yet accruing. There is no doubt, in our opinion, but that the rights of the defendant under the contract were saved by this act of repeal.” Notwithstanding this emphatic language, the true character of this peculiar interest in land has given the court much trouble. Some have likened it unto a joint tenancy, and this finds approval in Adams v. Beale, 19 Iowa, 61; but is rejected in Burns v. Keas, 21 Iowa, 259. Others have treated it as a life estate, though this seems to be only in states where the homestead is not abandoned prior to the acquirement of another, or is designated as an estate. Woodbury v. Luddy, 14 Allen, 1 (92 Am. Dec. 731) ; Snell v. Snell, 123 Ill. 403 (14 N. E. Rep. 684, 5 Am. St. Rep. 526) ; Browning v. Harris, 99 Ill. 456. See, also, Lubbock v. McMann, 82 Cal. 226 (22 Pac. Rep. 1145, 16 Am. St. Rep. 108). The interest is purely statutory, nothing like it being known at common law, and may not be alienated save by the joint instrument of husband and wife. The wife’s interest therein, when the fee is in her husband, is such that she may redeem from tax sale. Adams v. Beale, 19 Iowa, 61. And it cannot be cut off in the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by the husband prior to marriage, without making her a party. Chase v. Abbott, 20 Iowa, 157. In the last case, the court, *680through. Cole, J., said: “This right of the wife in the homestead is of a higher character and more in the nature of a vested interest or title, than is a dower right in the other real estate of the husband. It is of such a vested character as clothes her with a right to redeem from a tax sale (under a saving clause in favor of married women) after the time for redemption by her husband has expired.” Her interest therein, it has also been said, is an existing right, which sháis entitled to protect. Byers v. Johnson, 89 Iowa, 283; McClure v. Braniff, 75 Iowa, 43. Throughout the reports the interest in the lands which the law shields from the demands of the creditor for the use of the family is- uniformly spoken of as the right of homestead, and nowhere is treated as a mere privilege. The remark that “the statute is simply s statute of exemption, rather than a law conferring affirmative rights,” found in Burns v. Keas, supra, was made in response to the suggestion of a joint tenancy, and was in no way essential to the decision. That it was not intended as an assertion that no right was conferred is evident from an examination of Adams v. Beale and Chase v. Abbott, written by the same judge. Certainly, it is something more than a mere exemption to the owner, for the surviving spouse may enjoy it to the exclusion of his heirs, and it passes to his issue, not only exempt from his antecedent debts, but theirs as well. Section 2985, Code. While it is not essential to a decision that the homestead interest be classified, we remark, in passing, that it more closely resembles the life estate than any other, differing therefrom in the manner of acquirement and alienation, and possessing some of the characteristics of a joint tenancy. It is enough now to say that this court has uniformly referred to it as a right. That it is such was held in Gallagher v. Smiley, 28 Neb. 189 (44 N. W. Rep. 187, 26 Am. St. Rep. 319), where the homestead interest was adjudged a vested right, and not affected by subsequent legislation. A similar conclusion has been reached in several *681state in which the constitutions empowers the legislature to-provide for homestead exemptions. Bassett v. Messner, 30 Tex. 604; Barber v. Rorabeck, 36 Mich. 399; Ham v. Bank, 62 Cal. 125. It is not perceived in what way merely directory provisions contained in the fundamental law can affect the conclusion to be reached, and little stress is laid on that. fact in the cases cited. A respectable array of authorities,. however, say homestead laws pertain solely to the remedy.. Leak v. Gay, 107 N. C. 468 (12 S. E. Rep. 313) ; Bull v. Conroe, 13 Wis. 233; Harris v. Glenn, 56 Ga. 94. See cases, collected in 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 526, 614. While in the reasoning of these cases sufficient consideration does not, appear to have been given to the peculiar character of the-homestead interest, it must be admitted there is much force in the argument that, as it does not rest in contract, the leg- - islature may grant without loss of the power to repeal, and therefore it amounts to no more than a privilege behind which designated persons may take- refuge. We are not prepared" to say that the homestead right is strictly a vested right, as. was declared in Gallagher v. Smiley, supra, but it is and has - •ever been recognized by this court as a very valuable right, secured to the debtor for substantial reasons of public policy as well as individual and family benefit, and as such is within the protection of section 51 of the Code. — Affirmed.

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