15 Kan. 146 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This petition in error is prosecuted in this court for the purpose of reversing an order of the district court of Cowley county, overruling a motion of the plaintiff in error to set-aside a sheriff sale. On the 27th of October 1873 said district court rendered two judgments in an action in which Swain was plaintiff and Tarrant was defendant.
But it is claimed that Tarrant owns only the undivided-half of said lot, and that such an interest in property is insufficient to uphold a homestead claim. We can perceive no good reason why this should be so under our broad and comprehensive homestead provisions. (Thorn v. Thorn, 14 Iowa, 49; McClary v. Bixby, 36 Vt. 254.) The laws however of the various states upon this subject differ, and several decisions may be found on the other side of the question. Of course, a tenant in common can obtain no such homestead interest as will interfere with the rights or interests of his co-tenant, or any person rightfully holding under his co-tenant. But this is probably the only limitation upon his acquiring a homestead interest in such property. Third parties cannot say that, because a tenant in common cannot obtain such a homestead interest as will defeat or destroy the interest of his co-tenant, that therefore he cannot obtain any homestead ■ interest at all. Neither can his co-tenant question his right to acquire a homestead interest in the property, so long as such co-tenant is allowed to enjoy all his rights and privileges in and to said property as a co-tenant. There is a vast difference between holding property as tenants in common, and holding it as coparceners. Each co-tenant has a known, absolute, fixed, and determinate individual interest in the property. No coparcener has any such interest. In estates in coparcenary the whole of the property belongs to the coparceners jointly, as an aggregate and individual entity. It is like the property of a copartnership, no member of which has any specific interest in any article of property belonging to the copartnership. His interest is merely to share in the profit, or profit and loss, and receive dividends made from time to time, and at the final closing-up of the copartnership;
The order of the court below will be reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.