Weiner v. Sterling

61 Ala. 98 | Ala. | 1878

MANNING, J.

The contention on appellant’s part is, that the property in question was her homestead when her deed of it was made; that she was not examined according to the act of April 23d, 1873, separate and apart from her husband, when she acknowledged the execution of it; and that, therefore the deed is void. Defendant’s counsel on the contrary, insist that the wife’s separate estate “ can not be the subject of homestead exemption,” and next, that if it may be, still that the act of 1873 does not make Mrs.. Weiner’s deed void.

Upon the former of these propositions, consistency with our rulings in other cases, require us to non-concur with counsel for the defense.— Webber v. Short, 55 Ala. 318; McGuire v. Van Pelt, id. 359.

We think the homestead of a family may be situated on land of the statutory separate estate of the wife. And inasmuch,, as the law confers on her husband the authority to manage and control such property as trustee, and, in order to-prevent interference with his management and discord in the family circle, to receive and disburse the rents, income and profits without liability to account for them, — though they are not to be, even in his hands, subject to the payment of his debts, — the homestead might properly be considered-to some extent as that of the husband. Certainly it would be so regarded and as under the protection of the homestead law against his creditors, if he had in it any interest subject to execution that would enable them to expel him therefrom, by a sale of that interest.

But is it correct to say that the husband is the owner of such homestead property within the meaning of the subsequent part of the homestead law relating to sales or mort-gages thereof? True the possession of the wife’s statutory *103separate estate vests in him as trustee, and he is entitled to manage and control it, in order to enable him — the husband and father, and therefore trustee, without liability to account for the income, to provide therewith for the maintenance of the family. But he can not sell or mortgage the property to another. The title to it all remains in his wife; and in the event of such sale or mortgage being made by him, she, relying on her title, may sue alone, either at law or in equity, according to the case presented, to make void such alienation and recover the property back. This has been several times decided in respect to personal property, — over which it would seem the husband’s power would be, rather more than less absolute, than over the realty. The wife is herself the true owner of her separate estate.

Hence, the homestead situated thereon is under the terms of the homestead law quite as properly that of the wife as of the husband. The constitution elsewhere declares that property of the separate estate of the wife shall not be liable for any debts, obligations or engagements of her husband.” — § 6 of art. xiv. of Const. 1868, and of art. x. of Const, of 1875. It is thus exempt from sale to pay his debts, without the aid of a homestead law. The purpose of its provisions is — to prevent the homestead from being sold at the instance of even the owner’s creditors. The words of the constitution are : “ Every homestead .... owned and occupied by cmy resident of this State, [male or female, married or unmarried], shall be exempted from sale or execution or other final process of any court, — for any debt ” of course of such owner. And to give effect to this provision, we must hold that it is exempt as the homestead of the wife, from the payment of her debts or contracts; and that it is not in t'he power of the legislature, by changing the law so as to authorize a married woman to contract debts for which her statutory separate estate shall be liable, to subject her homestead thereon, of the extent and value prescribed in the constitution, to the payment of such debts, without her consent. We have no doubt therefore that the wife’s statutory separate estate may be subject to the homestead exemption.

In considering the second proposition insisted upon for the defense, we must go further. It does not depend on anything yet quoted from the constitution. The next clause therein is as follows: “ Such exemption, however, shall not extend to any mortgage lawfully obtained; but such mortgage or other alienation of the homestead, by the owner *104thereof, if a married man, shall not be valid, without the voluntary signature and assent of the wife to the same.” The statute of April 23d, 1873, under which this controversy arises, copies this language from the constitution, and then adds further, that the wife’s signature and assent must be shown by an examination of her on the subject, separate and apart from her husband, had “ before a Circuit or Supreme Court judge, or chancellor, or judge of probate,” and duly certified by him. Such an examination was not made and certified in this instance; a.nd the question to be decided is, whether the deed of Mrs. Weiner and her husband is, for this reason, invalid.

The transaction was “ an out and out sale ” for value. The property conveyed was of her statutory separate estate ; and the conveyance was duly executed to alienate it as such. But the property was the seat of the homestead in which the family lived. And the constitution and the statute both say that a “ mortgage or other alienation of such homestead by the owner thereof, if a married man,” shall not be valid without her signature and assent; and the statute adds — without an examination and certificate as prescribed.

The body of laws concerning the statutory separate estates of married women, has been regarded by this court as constituting a system by itself. And subsequent legislation is not understood as intended to change it, or the rules composing it, unless that be the manifest purpose of the enactment.

In Fisk v. Stubbs, 30 Ala. 339, the question was whether a conveyance by husband and wife of property of the wife’s statutory separate estate was valid without an acknowledgement by the wife, separate and apart from the husband, that she voluntarily executed it. The act of 1850 which established this separate estate and the provisions of which were carried into the Code of 1852, and have been continued in the subsequent Codes, said nothing about a private acknowledgement by the wife of such a conveyance. But a prior act (Clay’s Dig. 155, § 27), provided that “no estate of a feme covert, in any lands,” &c., “ in this State shall pass by her deed or conveyance without a previous acknowledgement made by her on a private examination,” &c. The court held that this law relating to a deed made by the wife, was “ not applicable to conveyances of the wife’s separate estate by husband and wife,” made under the act of 1850; and that this latter act “ makes no distinction as to the mode of acknowledgment by the husband and wife, and it would be *105most unreasonable to say that the husband must be privately examined,” &c. And in Weil v. Pope, 53 Ala. 588, it was held that an enactment of 1858, which was carried into the Revised Code of 1867, as section 1552, qualified the older section 2373, of the same Code, concerning the mode of conveying the property of such separate estate, only because section 1552, “so obviously by the language used, as well as by the fact that it would otherwise be wholly inoperative,” made such a construction necessary.

In view of the language of the constitution, and statute of 1873, we think it the better opinion that the words, “ such mortgage or other alienation of the homestead by the owner thereof, if a married man,” &c., do not embrace a conveyance by a married woman and her husband of land of her statutory separate estate, although it be proved that their homestead was upon it.

Our legislators probably considered that a husband would be more wilful in carrying out a wish to mortgage or sell land of his own, though his homestead should be on it, and that his wife would be less resolved in her opposition to his doing so, — than either would be in regard to the alienation of land which belonged to her, especially if it embraced her homestead. And it may therefore have been thought sufficient to be assured of her assent, by a private interrogation, only when the homestead was situated on property, the title to which was not vested in her. Certainly the owner of the property was not, in this instance, “ a married man.” In the language used in Webber v. Short, 55 Ala. 316, we should stretch words and expressions beyond their proper meaning,” and “ disregard limitations that are written on the face of the constitution,” if we extended the operation of this clause of the homestead law so as to make it annul the deed of Mrs. Weiner and her husband.

Let the judgment in the Circuit Court be affirmed.