28 Minn. 13 | Minn. | 1881
This cause comes up on appeal from an order of the district court, reversing, in part, an order of the probate court, and allowing the two items in the administrator’s account hereinafter referred to. From this order, allowing these items, the heirs appeal to this court.
The facts were all stipulated upon the trial in the court below, and are as follows: “That the house occupied by Mary Wilson, the widow of the deceased, was the homestead of the said deceased at the time of his death; that the same, and the lots pertaining thereto, were occupied by his said widow continuously, from and after his said
From this state of facts it is clear that the widow had a homestead right in these premises, to the extent of the house and a quantity of ground on which the same was situate, not exceeding in amount “one lot, ” the premises being situated in the laid-out or platted part of a city containing over 5,000 inhabitants. The duty of paying taxes and making repairs upon this homestead, during the continuance of the homestead right, devolved upon the widow, and not upon the estate of the decedent. This duty the law always imposes upon the person who has such present interest or estate in real property as entitles him to enjoy the use and occupation, and to receive the rents and profits of the estate. The case of a tenant of an estate for life is an illustration of the application of this doctrine almost too familiar to require the citation of authorities. 1 Washburn, Real Property, 97; Hilliard on Taxation, c. 6, § 21a. But it was argued that, inasmuch as the widow had made no formal selection of a homestead, and no decree had been made by the probate court assigning a homestead to her, therefore she had no vested right or estate to or in any part of this tract, and that, until this was done, the whole remained assets of the estate in the hands of the administrator; therefore it was his duty to pay taxes upon the whole property, and to keep it in repair.
We think this is a mistaken view of the nature of the homestead
In the present case there was vested in the widow, by virtue of the visible occupancy and use thereof by herself and husband before his deathj and by herself after his death, a homestead right or estate in this tract of land to the amount of one lot, upon which it was her duty, and not that of the estate, to pay taxes and make repairs. True, she was occupying, under the claim of a homestead right, more land than she was by law entitled to; for it appears that this property was situated within the laid-out or platted portion of the city of
This construction of the statute is not free from difficulty, but it is in accordance with the manifest intention of the legislature, and seems to be the only construction that is practicable or reasonable. But in such case it was the duty of the administrator, if he desired to assert his right to the remainder of the tract for the purposes of administration, to call on the widow to designate, by selection, the boundaries of her homestead, or take some other steps to have the boundaries of her homestead determined and fixed, so as to ascertain what part of the tract he was entitled to the possession and control of as administrator. But, instead of so doing, he allows the widow to enjoy the use of the whole tract, and then applies the personal assets in his hands to make repairs and pay taxes upon the entire property. The manifest injustice of this to the next of kin, to whom the personal estate of the decedent belonged, points pretty conclusively to the conclusion that the course adopted by the administrator in this case was not the correct one.
.Whether, under the circumstances, the administrator might not, with the consent of the next of kin or creditors, or under the direction of the probate court, be authorized to make repairs or pay taxes upon the homestead, when such becomes necessary, owing to the default of the occupants to save the reversionary interest of the estate from waste or forfeiture, we do not now determine. No such supposed state of facts is made to appear in this case. Neither is it necessary to consider whether, in the present case, the administrator might not, under a proper showing, be entitled to be allowed a certain portion of the moneys thus expended by him, for the reason that the facts, as stipulated, furnish no basis for any such apportionment.
We are, therefore, of opinion that these two items contained in the
Cornell, J., owing to illness, took no part in this case.