53 Vt. 554 | Vt. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only question to be considered is. whether the defendant, C. C. Field, had a homestead in the premises described in the petition at the time of the execution of the mortgage sought to be foreclosed, and whether he can now assert his right to such homestead.
Where a homestead is claimed, it is incumbent upon the claimant to show that the premises have been used or kept by him as a homestead. It has been held under the statute of 1849, which required that the premises should be occupied as a homestead, in True v. Morrill, 28 Vt. 672; Mills v. Grant, 36 Vt. 269; Davis v. Andrews, 30 Vt. 678, that there must be a personal occupancy of the premises by the housekeeper, and that he should live and have his home there. After that statute was amended so that it was only required that the premises should be used or kept by such housekeeper or head of a family it was held, in West River Bank v. Gale, 42 Vt. 27, that the premises must actually be used or kept as a homestead ; and that a temporary sojourn elsewhere for a specific purpose would not be an abandonment of the place as his homestead, if his intention was to keep it as a homestead, and he purposed to return to it after such temporary sojourn elsewhere, and did so return. The examination we have made of the pleadings and proofs has failed to convince us that O. C. Field ever so used any portion of the mortgaged premises as to be entitled to a homestead therein. His occupation of the house after his marriage and until his removal to Montpelier was only occasional, and was rather, as it seems to us, to accommodate the business of himself and brother, than with a design or expectation of making it his home in the sense in which the word is used construing the statute. In
It is unnecessary to consider the question whether C. C. Field
This finding is conclusive against the right of C. C. Field to a homestead in the premises described in the mortgage sought to be foreclosed; but the question of the legal effect of the mortgage deed executed by C. C. Field upon the assumption that he then had a homestead in the premises described in it, has been ably discussed by counsel, and we have thought proper to consider it.
It has been claimed by counsel for C. C. Field, that that deed was absolutely void ; and in support of that claim they relied mainly upon what is said by the judge who drew up the opinion in Abell et al. v. Lothrop, 47 Vt. 375. It is there said, in speaking of the sole deed of a husband and father of minor children, while they were in the occupancy of certain premises as a homestead, that his deed was absolutely void — that he had no capacity to deed, and that the title to the estate remained as if no deed had been executed. In that case the premises sought to be exempted as a homestead, were occupied by. the grantor and his family, as and for a homestead at the time his mortgage deed of the same was executed ; and when the assignee of the mortgage sought to oust the orators, who were the grantor, his wife and minor children, from the possession of the same, it was only necessary to determine upon that state of facts whether a deed so executed would estop the grantor, his wife and minor children from claiming a homestead in the premises described in it. All that the court was called upon to decide, and all that it intended to decide was, that such a deed was voidable at the instance of any party who had a homestead interest in the premises attempted to be conveyed by it.
The homestead right of the wife and minor children is inchoate, subject to be defeated by the abandonment of the same by the head of the family or the acquisition of another homestead by him. Howe v. Adams, 28 Vt. 541; Davis v. Andrews, 30 Vt. 678; Jewett v. Brock, 32 Vt. 65; McClary v. Bixby, 36 Vt. 254.
The object in requiring the wife to join in a deed conveying the homestead was for her protection and that of the minor children. That object is fully attained by holding that the sole deed of the husband and father is voidable for the benefit of the wife and children. That construction harmonizes with the spirit and intent of the law upon the subject; while the construction put upon it (inadvertently no doubt) by the judge who drew up the opinion in that case might lead to the absurd results hereinbefore indicated, and is in conflict with the admitted rules of law defining the legal interests of grantor and grantee under a conveyance where the estate is incumbered at the time the deed is executed.
The Court of Chancery erred in decreeing that C. C. Field was entitled to a homestead in the premises described in the petition ; and that decree is reversed, and cause remanded, with a mandate that a decree be entered for the petitioners against all of the defendants except Marcellus A. and Josephine S. Bingham for the amount due upon the claims, and amount paid for taxes, as set forth in the petition, with interest on the same, and against all of the premises described in the petition.