103 P. 931 | Cal. | 1909
This is an appeal from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for new trial. The action was for the partition of lots 3, 4, and 5 in block L in the city of Redlands. While defendants Edward Walden and Louella, his wife, appellant herein, were the admitted owners of these lots under deeds hereinafter to be considered, Louella made a declaration of homestead on lots 3 and 4, where she and her husband resided. Subsequently, the homestead never having been abandoned, the husband executed a deed of grant of all of his interest in the lots to plaintiff Swan. Judgment passed for plaintiff, and Louella Walden appeals, urging: 1. That the estate held by herself and her husband in the lots was a tenancy by the entirety; that, consequently, *196 the husband was without power to convey and his deed was, therefore, void; 2. That by reason of the valid homestead upon lots 3 and 4 the husband was unable to convey any interest or estate affecting those lots.
1. On the first proposition appellant contends for the existence of the common-law tenancy by entirety. This tenancy was a modification of the joint tenancy and arose where an estate was conveyed to a husband and wife under circumstances which would have created simply a joint tenancy if the conveyance had been made to any two people other than a husband and a wife. The estate was still, at common law, a joint tenancy, but because of the disabilities of the wife, the common law regarding the husband and wife as one, by construction the courts erected a modification of the tenancy. The modification was that while such estates had, like a joint tenancy, the quality of survivorship, they differed in the essential respect that neither spouse could convey his or her interest so as to affect the right of survivorship in the other. In the eye of the law the spouses were not seized of moieties but of entireties. (1 Wn. Real Prop., 6th ed., p. 562.) Thus, while in the case of a joint tenancy a severance of any of the unities, as a conveyance by one of the joint tenants to a third person, terminated the joint tenancy and transformed the new estate into a tenancy in common, this could not be done in a tenancy by entirety, owing to the fiction of the law that, in the latter tenancy, each held an undivided right to the whole and not, as in a joint tenancy, a right to an undivided half. Of course it was well settled, and is well settled, where a tenancy by entirety is recognized, that neither spouse can so destroy the character of the estate as to prevent the survivor becoming sole owner. (Frost v. Frost, 200 Mo. 474, [118 Am. St. Rep. 689, 98 S.W. 527]; Thornburg v. Wiggins,
In this state, however, the reason which obtained at common law, and which forced the courts into the declaration of a tenancy by entirety, has no existence whatsoever. The right of the wife to hold property and to contract, is fully recognized and upheld. With the ending of the reason for the rule, the rule itself should cease. The spirit of our laws makes against the recognition of such an estate. Besides the *197
compulsion of the common-law theory, there was an added protection to the wife when property was conveyed to the spouses under these circumstances. It was her clumsy equivalent to the modern homestead. She could not be disturbed in her possession, in her title, nor in her enjoyment, and if she survived, the fee vested absolutely in her. But in this state the code declares (Civ. Code, sec.
2. The second question to be answered may be thus stated: May land, held in joint tenancy by husband and wife, be impressed with a homestead at the instance of the wife, the sole objection to the validity of the homestead being the nature of the tenancy in which the land is held? As early as 1855, this court decided, in Davis v. Fleischacker,
For which reasons we hold that the homestead declared by the wife was valid, and, as a necessary consequence, the deed of the husband alone, made after the declaration, was inoperative and void.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed, with directions to the trial court to enter a new judgment in conformity with the above.
Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied. *201