Brooks v. Johns

HARALSON, J.

J. R. Newell, a resident citizen of Cleburne county, died intestate on the 17tli June, 1895, leaving a widow, Mrs. R. E. Newell, and. no minor child or children. He was the owner, at the date of his death, of a homestead in lands, on which with his wife he resided, and on which she continued to reside a<Mer his death. No administration was taken on the estate of said Newell until the 21st January, 1896, on which date letters of administration were issued by the probate court of said county to the appellee.

On the 19th of. July, 1895, the widow of the said deceased, filed in the probate court of said county li»r 'written application, verified by her own oath, by which she sought to have her homestead and other exemptions set apart to 'her. The petition, after setting out other appropriate and necessary averments, contained the following statement as to her homestead exemption and her exemption as to personal property of the estate of her husband: “That said J. R. Newell, deceased, at and prior to his death owned and occupied the following described lands, to-wit: E. 1 of S. TV. ± and TV. i of S.‘e. -j-of section 14, township 15, range 11, in Cleburne county, Alabama, with his family, the undersigned, as his homestead, upon which he resided at and prior to his death, and that said homestead does not exceed in area 160 acres, nor in value, two thousand dollars, and that said lands embrace the entire tract constituting his homestead, and that the undersigned, his said widoAv, has continuously resided upon and occupied said lands since his death as her homestead, to the present time, and that said deceased did not have personal property exceeding in value $1,000. And that there 'has been no administration upon the estate of said deceased, and more than sixty days have elapsed since the death of said deceased. Wherefore petitioner now makes this application for the purpose • of having the above described lands set apart to her as her homestead, together with the personal property belonging to said deceased at the time of liis death, she claiming said homestead and personal property exempt from administration and from the payment of the debts of said deceased.”

*415Oh tlie same clay, the court appointee! -two commissioners, and issued a commission to them, who were,required to make “a full and complete inventory, and appraisement of the real and.personal property, of .said decedent, describing the property and making and stating the value of each item or parcel thereof and the amount of any liens or incumbrance thereon, if known, and the value of the property over and above such liens and incumbrance thereon, created before the death of decedent, as required by law, and to do and perform all such acts and make such report as required of them by law as such commissioners,” etc.

In the order appointing the commissioners, and in the commission issued to them, it is recited, in the first, as being a part of the averment of the petition, “that at the time of the death of said J. R. Newell, deceased, he OAvned in this state personal and real property, not exceeding the amount exempt to his said widow, E. R. NeAvell, as provided under the laws of this state,” etc.; and in the commission itself the same aArerment by Avay of recital of Avhat the petition contained is also found, Avhereas, AAiien Ave turn to the petition, it is found to contain no such averment as to the real estate. It does state, as has been shown above, “that said deceased did not Imre personal property exceeding in Aralue $1,000;” but it is silent as to the quantity and value of the real estate deceased owned at his death, and from aught appearing therein he may have owned real property largely in excess of the amount exempted to a AvidoAV and minor child or children under the statutes of this state.

The commissioners acted and made their report to the court on the 19 th day of July, 1897, — the same day the widoAv filed her petition — and the court granted its prayer therefor and appointed the commissioners to act; and on the same day,. again, the court made and entered its order confirming the report of the commissioners. This report contained an inventory of the personal property, amounting in the aggregate to $200.70, and set the same aside to the widow as exempt. It also stated, that they had set apart the 160 acres of land mentioned in the petition, as a homestead.to said Avidow, and-recites, that it was the homestead .of deceased at .the time of his death. They.valued it,at $400. They ..also reported-that deceased owned 40 acres, no part of the homestead *416tract, nor contiguous thereto, which land was under a mortgage given by deceased before his death, and that the same was of no value in excess of the mortgage on it. It is noticeable, that the-commissioners nowhere state in their report, that this homestead tract of 160 acres, and this other mortgaged tract of 40 acres, constituted all the real property which • deceased owned at his death, nor does the final decree of the court confirming said report so state, and from aught appearing, deceased may have been the owner of other lands in excess of the exemption allowed by law to his widow. The entire proceeding appears to have been ese parte.

The statute under which the exemption of homestead in this case was sought to be set aside,, provides, that “When the property real and personal owned by a decedent at the time of his death, does not. exceed ifi amount and value the exemptions allowed ih favor of his widow and minor child or children, or either, and no administration is granted on his estate within 60 days after his death, the probate court of the county in which he resided at the time of his death, upon the application of the widow * * * verified by oath, and setting forth such facts, must appoint two commissioners who shall make a full and complete inventory of the real and personal property of such decedent describing the property and describing each item or part thereof,” etc. Code, 1886 §2562, Code, 1896, §2097. It is then provided, that if such property, real and personal, or both, does not exceed in amount or value the exemptions allowed in such property, the commissioners must set apart the same to the widow and minor child or children, or either, as exempt from administration, etc. — Code, 1886, §2563, Code, 1896, §2098.

By act adopted December 13th, 1892, carried substantially into the Code of 1896 as section 2100, it was provided, “that whenever the estate of a decedent, who dies leaving an estate less in value than' the amount exempted by law, either real or personal, or both, is set aside as provided by law to the widow' or widow and minor children, or to the minor children, the title to the property so set aside, whether real or personal, shall vest absolutely in fee in such widow, or widow and minor child, or minor children.” In such cases, ás we have held, it is not indispensable for the widow or minors to lay claim thereto by having it set aside to her or them. The law *417interferes and attaches to such property as absolutely as if the particular property had been selected, set apart and exempted, and such would be the case whether there-had been administration on the estate of the husband or father or not. —Garland v. Bostick, 23 So. Rep. 698; Jackson v. Wilson, 23 So. Rep. 521.

In respect to the homestead exemption under said section 2562 of the Code of 1886, (§2097 of Code 1896), under which this proceeding was instituted, it was long ago held, that the probate court has jurisdiction to make an order setting aside the homestead exemption thereunder, only when the real property owned by the decedent at the time of his death, does not exceed in amount 160 acres, in connection with the other conditions recited in the statute. — James v. Clarke, 89 Ala. 606; DeArmond v. Whitaker, 99 Ala. 252; Smith v. Boutwell, 101 Ala. 373.

Exemption laws should receive the utmost liberality of construction in furtherance of the objects proposed by them. — Chandler v. Chandler, 87 Ala. 303; Waples on Homestead Ex., 30-32. Yet, in making application for homestead exemption, in cases where applications are required, the application should contain all the averments which the court must know in order to grant the petition; and the burden is on the claimant to establish by evidence all allegations necessary to the claiming of his rights. — Waples on Homes. Exs., pp. 697, 700.

By the very terms of the statute under which the proceeding for homestead in this case was instituted, it is provided, as has appeared, “When the property, real or personal, owned by a decedent at the time of his death, does not exceed in amount and value the exemptions allowed in favor of the widow and minor child or children, or either,” etc., the-probate court, “upon the application of the widow” * * * * must appoint commissioners and proceed to set apart the exemption. The. widow here made the application, but it did not contain the necessary averment without which the court was without authority to proceed, — that the real property of decedent, at the time of his death, did not exceed the, amount and value allowed to his widow, etc. This averment, which seems to have been industriously avoided, was jurisdictional; and moreover, we have seen the court in its final order did not find that condition of the es*418t-ate to be true. The allotment of homestead by said commissioners was, therefore, void, and the widow acquired no title thereby which she could sell and transfer' to the defendant.

'The finding and' judgment of the court below must be affirmed.

Affirmed.