160 Mo. 507 | Mo. | 1901
This is a suit by one of the adult heirs at law of Cornelius Johnson, deceased, late of DeKalb county, Missouri, against his widow and other heirs for the assignment of the homestead and dow-er of the widow, Mrs. Mary Johnson, and the minor children, and for a partition of the remainder of said estate.
The lands consist of ninety-five acres in D'eKalb county, the homestead of Cornelius Johnson at the time of his death. The petition is in the usual form. The answer admitted the heirship and the. title to the land, and consents to the admeasurement of the dower and homestead, but avers that at the time of the death of Cornelius Johnson the dwelling house,
On the trial, the court heard the evidence as to the condition and value of the lands at the time of the death of Cornelius Johnson, and made its findings that Cornelius Johnson died seized and possessed of the following lands, to-wit: The south half of the southwest quarter of section 2 and 15 acres off the north side of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 12, all in township 59, range 30, DeKalb county, Missouri; the north line of said 15 acres being the north boundary line of said quarter section,' and the south boundary line being parallel with said north boundary line.
At the next term the commissioners made their report that in obedience to the decree of the court they set off to the widow and minor children seventy-one and one-fourth acres of said land by specific metes and bounds. Thereupon plaintiffs moved the court for new' commissioners and for a modification of the decree so as to have the homestead valued as of the present value of said lands and the improvements thereon and also moved the court to reject the report of the commissioners. These motions the court overruled, and plaintiffs excepted.
Plaintiffs then moved the court to set aside its judgment
After a motion in arrest was overruled, plaintiffs appealed to this court.
I. From the foregoing abstract of the record it will be observed that the only question presented is of what date shall the commissioners appointed to admeasure a homestead to a widow and minor children fix upon as the proper time for valuing the land ? Shall they estimate the value oí the lands as of the date of the death of the ancestor or as of the date . when tfiey admeasure it ? The answer must be made in view of our homestead statute.
Cornelius Johnson died in 1891, and the statute then in force must govern. It was the Act of .1875, known in the revision of 1889, as section 5439, and is as follow’s:
“If any such housekeeper or head of a family shall die leaving a widow or any minor children, his homestead to the value of aforesaid (to-wit, $1,500) shall pass to and vest in such widow or children, or if there be both, to such widow and children, and shall continue for their benefit without being subject to the' payment of the debts of the deceased, unless legally charged thereon in his lifetime, until the youngest child shall attain its legal majority, and until the death of such widow; and such homestead shall, upon the death of such housekeeper or head of a family, be limited to that period.”
In Riddick v. Walsh, 15 Mo. 537, Judge Scott said, “Every estate within our knowledge has been- administered upon the supposition that the law existing at the time of the dissolution of the contract by death regulates the right of the widow.”
Under the terms of the Act of 1875, in force when Cornelius Johnson died, the homestead estate passed to and vested in his widow for her life and his minor children until they reached their majority. In West v. McMullen, 112 Mo. 405, we held that an estate for life and not a mere right of occupancy vested in the wife on the death of her husband and so it was ruled in Hufschmidt v. Gross, 112 Mo. 657. While it is a continuance of the estate of the husband, continued residence on the land is not essential to the estate.
Counsel for plaintiff takes the position that, until the widow’s homestead is assigned to her, she has no estate. He basis this contention on the execution law, which requires the exemption to be set out and then the balance can be sold. [See. 3624, E. S. 1899.]
In other words, they claim that the homestead is not an estate, not a right, but a privilege restricted by statute, in quantity and value. We can not agree to this statement of the law. As already said the settled construction is that it is an estate, and that it passes and vests in the widow and children at the instant the husband dies, subject only to be admeasured;
But even while held in a larger tract and unallotted the' wife can sell and convey it and her purchaser will stand in her shoes. [Weatherford v. King, 119 Mo. 51; Colvin v. Hauenstein, 110 Mo. 579.]
The estate passed to and vested in Mrs. Johnson and her children when her husband died, and was not in abeyance until one of the heirs should bring partition. If it passed to her at the death of her husband, that was the -time to which the statute looks when it fixed the amount she should take, and she was entitled to have $1,500 worth of the land assigned to her as of the value of that time, and it was by the same reasoning $J,500 worth of the land left by her husband, and not subsequent improvements which she placed upon the lands. We think the court properly construed the law, and its judgment is affirmed.