The first question on the exceptions taken to the master’s report is, whether he was right in finding that the wife of the defendant had no right of homestead in the estate which was the subject of the contract.
It is conceded that a homestead estate was acquired under the statute of 1855, and that no new homestead has since been gained by the defendant. But the defendant removed with hia *3family, in 1858, from the lot on which he had acquired a homestead, and the report finds that there is no evidence of any act or intent on the part of either the defendant or his wife to continue the right in the house or lot from which they removed, though they have since returned to it. While they ceased to occupy it, the defendant leased it .to a tenant. The question is, therefore, whether the homestead right was lost by abandonment.
There is great difficulty in reconciling the language used in the various decisions upon the subject.
The statute of 1855 created the homestead exemption in the farm or lot, and buildings thereon, “ occupied as a residence, and owned by the debtor, or any such buildings owned by the debtor and so occupied, on land not his own, but of which he shall be in rightful possession, by lease or otherwise, he being a householder and having a family.” It provided that no release or waiver of such exemption should be valid, unless by deed for good consideration, acknowledged and recorded as in the case of conveyances of real estate; and that the exemption should continue after the death of the householder, for the benefit of the widow and children of the deceased party, some one of them continuing to occupy such homestead, until the youngest child should be twenty-one years of age, and until the death of the widow. It further provided that no conveyance by the husband of any property thus exempted should be valid in law unless the wife joined in the deed of conveyance.
In the subsequent statutes which create a homestead estate there are different provisions, which do not affect the homestead exemption acquired under the statute of 1855.
There is nothing in the language of the statute which would show that the “release or waiver” which it names is applicable to anything else than the homestead exemption for which it provides ; that is, the exemption of a homestead occupied as a residence by the debtor. And it would not seem an unnatural construction to hold that, as the exemption was only of a homestead thus occupied, the removal of the owner from the property ex-emitted would terminate the homestead ; not by reason of any *4waiver or release, but because the condition of the exemption thereby ceased to exist. The continuance of the right to the widow and children was made expressly dependent on the continuance of the occupation. And this was the view which was taken in some of the earlier decisions. Thus in Drury v. Bachelder, 11 Gray, 214, it is said by Mr. Justice Dewey: “ That a homestead right or exemption may be lost is obvious. Such would be the effect of acquiring a new homestead by a change of place of residence, or by other acts of abandonment of an unequivocal character by all parties interested in its continuance.” But in that case it was held that there had been no such change of residence as to constitute an abandonment; and the reasoning of the court implies that the removal of the husband without the consent and concurrence of the wife would not be sufficient.
But in Connor v. McMurray, 2 Allen, 202, it was expressly decided that a right of homestead acquired under St. 1857, c. 298, was not lost by the removal of the householder and his family from the premises; the court saying that the provision in the statute that “ no release or waiver of such exemption shall be valid in law unless by deed, acknowledged and recorded as in the case of conveyances of real estate,” is a complete and decisive answer to the suggestion that the homestead would be lost by removal. This provision is precisely the same in the statute of 1855. The statute of 1857 contains a clause not found in that of 1855, to the effect that no new right of homestead should be acquired, until a previous one had been discharged or released by a deed, with the consent of the wife expressed therein; which, in connection with the requirement that a homestead right should be a matter of record, would tend to support the conclusion to which the court arrived; and perhaps furnishes the most conclusive reason for it; but the reason given in the opinion is applicable alike to both statutes. In Doyle v. Coburn, 6 Allen, 71, it was held that the removal of the wife and children of the owner, and the sale of the premises on an execution against him, did not defeat his right of homestead exemption if he continued personally in possession. The case of Castle v *5Palmer, 6 Allen, 404, is only to the point that a deed of the husband, in which the wife does not join, is inoperative to release the homestead, even during his life. In Dulanty v. Pynchon, 6 ALen, 510, the court held that the removal from the premises for a temporary purpose, with the intention to return, would not affect the homestead right; and this was sufficient for the decision of the case. But the chief justice, who delivered the opinion, gave as an additional reason for it, that a homestead right, once acquired under the statute of 1855, could not be discharged except by deed. In Lazell v. Lazell, 8 Allen, 575, the decision was placed on the ground that the removal from the premises was not shown to be for other than a temporary purpose. Mr.
Justice Dewey then observes, after citing Drury v. Bachelder, and Dulanty v. Pynchon, that “ these and other reported cases indicate strongly the views of this court to be that if any abandonment can have the effect to defeat an existing homestead, upon which we express no opinion, it must be full and complete, and under circumstances that leave no doubt that such was the intention of all parties interested in the homestead right, and that they had a settled purpose not to return to the same as a place of residence.” He does not refer to Connor v. McMurray, and seems to consider the question as open.
As the decision in Connor v. McMwrray was under the statute of 1857, and was clearly right under the special provisions of that statute, and as the decision in Dulanty v. Pynchon rests upon satisfactory grounds, not dependent upon the question now before us, there could be no insurmountable objection to treating the provisions of the statute as still unsettled by judicial construction.
But the decisions which have been made upon another part of the statute seem to us conclusive, and to establish by authority the construction, that no abandonment of the premises to which the homestead exemption has once attached will be sufficient to terminate it, until a new homestead is acquired elsewhere. The original exemption is created by the statute, not merely by reason of the ownership and occupation of the land or buildings, but it requires also that the occupant shall be a *6householder and have a family. Woodworth v. Comstock, 10 Allen, 425. No good reason can be given why the continuance of one of these conditions should be held essential to the continuance of the homestead, more than of the other. But in Doyle v. Coburn, 6 Allen, 71, it was expressly held that the homestead was not lost by the loss of his family by the householder. And see also Silloway v. Brown, 12 Allen, 30.
The first exception to the master’s report is therefore sustained ; and there must be added to the sum which the defendant is to pay on account of his failure to convey the estate with a release of dower, the sum of $533, which is found to be the present value of the homestead right. The other exception to the report cannot be supported.
The general rule undoubtedly is, that when a person can only partially perform a contract into which he has entered, he must respond in damages to the extent of the difference in value between that which the other party receives and that to which the contract entitled him. And this is found by taking the market value of what is delivered, and deducting .it from the market value of the whole subject of the contract. Wetherbee v. Bennett, 2 Allen, 428. But this rule is not universal; and, in the case of an incumbrance on an estate conveyed with covenants of warranty, the more usual measure of damages for the breach of the covenant against incumbrances has been the market value of the incumbrance, where this was capable of an exact estimate. Estabrook v. Hapgood, 10 Mass. 315.
But under the peculiar relation of the parties, we can have no doubt that the latter rule is the just one. The plaintiff seeks the aid of a court of equity to compel the specific performance of the defendant’s contract to convey land. The defendant is unable to make a perfect title; and the court, at the plaintiff’s election, will compel the conveyance of so much as the defendant can convey, and will award compensation in the nature of damages for the deficiency. The defendant has not undertaken to apportion the contract. If he were sued at law, the whole market value of the estate would be the measure of damages But dividing the estate may very much increase the proportionate *7damages, without any corresponding advantage to the defendant. By making the election, the plaintiff undertakes to receive what the defendant never agreed to give, namely, a partial conveyance of the estate; and equity will only allow this on the condition that the defendant shall not thereby be subjected t unreasonable injury. The plaintiff in effect elects to take satis faction partly in land and partly in money; and if he is allowed to do this he should only in equity be allowed to receive the fair money value of the part of the estate which is not conveyed to him. In the adjudged cases, though this is sometimes called damages, it is more usually spoken of as an equitable compensation for the value of that which the defendant does not convey. Decree accordingly.