Ejectment to recover a lot of land in the city of Santa Cruz. It appears, that, on the 24th of May, 1867, the defendant Frank Cooper was the owner and in the possession of the premises. He was then a widower, and was living there with his family, which consisted of his sister-in-law and his two minor children —a son twenty years of age, and a daughter fifteen years of age. On the day named, he filed a declaration claiming the premises, then worth $3,500, and at no time since exceeding $5,000 in value, as a homestead, and on the 25th of June, 1872, he married his present wife, Lucy S. Cooper, who, immediately after her marriage, went to reside with her husband upon the land, and has continued to reside there with him ever since. When the declaration was filed, the son was employed in a telegraph office, receiving and retaining his wages, boarding at home, and assisting in maintaining the family. Until October, 1867, the daughter was living with and entirely dependent upon her father for support. In 1868, she was teaching school and supporting herself elsewhere.
On the 19th of August, 1878, the defendant Frank Cooper executed to the plaintiff, for a valuable consideration, a deed of conveyance for the property, in which deed his wife did not join ; and it is now claimed by him, in defense to the present action, as well as by his wife, who was permitted by the Court below to intervene in the action, that the deed to the plaintiff was void because of the non-joinder of the wife therein.
On the part of defendants, it is contended that Frank Cooper acquired the homestead in question by virtue of his being the head of a family ; and that the right thus acquired inured upon his subsequent marriage to the benefit of his wife, and that thereafter the property could not be disposed of without the joint act of both husband and wife.
Section 5 of the amendatory Act of May 12th, 1862 (Stats. 1862, p. 519), which was in force at the time of the filing of the declaration and until the taking effect of the Codes, declared : “ No unmarried person shall be entitled to select or hold *341a homestead, as prescribed in the preceding sections of said act, unless such person has the care and maintenance of his or her minor child, or of a minor brother or sister, or a minor child of a deceased brother or sister, or of a father or mother, or of a grandfather or a grandmother, or of an unmarried sister, then residing on the homestead property with such person.”
Here is an express statutory declaration, that no unmarried person shall select or hold a homestead unless he has the care and maintenance of one or more of the persons mentioned. In the case at bar, the minor children of the defendant Cooper attained their majority, the son on the 2nd of January, 1868, and the daughter on the 1st of March, 1870. On the last mentioned day, therefore, he ceased to have the care or maintenance of any minor child; and not having the care and maintenance of any of the other persons named in the statute, it follows, that on the 1st of March, 1870, he ceased to hold the homestead, which ho was allowed to acquire only because he had the care and maintenance of his minor children. In making the provision under consideration, the Legislature was but applying the rule, that where the reason for the exemption ceased, the exemption itself should cease. The homestead right that attached to the premises by virtue of the declaration filed by Frank Cooper on the 24th of May, 1867, having ceased to exist long prior to his marriage with the intervenor, and there having been no declaration of homestead filed by either after marriage, it results that the joining of the wife in the conveyance to the plaintiff was not necessary, the property being the separate property of the husband.
This view renders it unnecessary to determine the other points made on behalf of the respondent.
Judgment affirmed.
McKinstry, J., and McKee, J., concurred.