Webb v. Davis

B. B. Battle, Special Judge.

This is an action to foreclose a mortgage on lots four, five, six, seven, eight and nine, in block three hundred and one, in the city of Little Rock, executed on the 14th day of June, 1871, by the appellees, Davis and wife. The mortgage was given to secure the payment of a note, bearing even date with the mortgage, executed by said appellees to appellant for one thousand dollars, borrowed money, and interest thereon; and contains tho following clause: ‘ ‘ And we the said George A. Davis and Mary A. Davis, wife to said George A. Davis, do hereby forever renounce all claims to the above conveyed property as a homestead, and we do fully agree and covenant with the said James P. Webb, that said property is not our homestead, and forms no part thereof, and we do not claim it as such.”

Appellees, Davis and wife, who .were defendants in the court below, answered, admitting the execution of the note and mortgage — confessing the complaint — and saying substantially and in effect, that they had, before the execution of the mortgage, purchased lots seven, eight and nine, but had never paid the purchase money, and that afterwards, under a decree in a suit instituted by the vendor against them to foreclose a vendor’s lien for unpaid purchase money, said lots were sold to Cora F. Faust; that appellee, George A. Davis, was at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and still is a resident of this State, and the head of a family; that they were the owners of lots four, five and six,- at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and still are the owners thereof; that the same were, at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and still are used and occupied by them as their homestead, and were then and ate now their homestead and residence, and, with the improvements thereon,. do not exceed in value the sum of five thousand dollars ; that they have no other home or place of residence in this State,, and claiming the same as their homestead.

To this answer, appellant filed a general demurrer which was overruled.

No question as to the sufficiency of the complaint was-raised, but the defects in the same were considered by the court below, in a written opinion delivered and filed by the-chancellor, as supplied by the answer.

The action was finally dismissed by an order of the court, in the words following: “Plaintiff declines to amend. Wherefore this cause is dismissed for want of equity, at the cost of plaintiff.”

1. homeSTEAD: Mortgage constitu1868. According to the answer, lots four, five and six were the-homestead of defendants at the time of the execution of the mortgage and still are such homestead ; and as to them the mortgage was null and void. Fritz v. Fritz, 32 Ark., 327; Sentell v. Armor, 35 Ark., 49; Klink v. Knoble, decided at the present term, and Wassell v. Tunnah. 25 Ark., 101.

Estoppel. Appellant insists that the clause in the mortgage copied in this opinion estops appellees from claiming any of theafore described lots as a homestead. Has it that effect?' We think not. The Constitution of 1868, which was in force at the time of the execution of the mortgage, expressly declares that “ the homestead of any resident of this State, who is a married man or head of a family, shall not be encumbered in any manner while owned by him,” except with liens for taxes, and with laborer’s, mechanic’s and vendor’s liens. Lots four, five and six were the homestead of appellees at. the time of the execution of the mortgage sued on ; and the mortgage, if anything, was an effort to encumber the homestead, and is in that respect void because it violated the Constitution of 1868.

The fact that any of these lots were or were not the homestead of appellees depended not upon any recitals, statements, stipulations or covenants contained in the mortgage..

The actual use and occupation as a home and residence constituted the homestead, and could only be shown by extrinsic evidence. To assert and maintain the right of homestead the appellees must necessarily be permitted to plead and prove this fact. This follows as an inseparable and necessary incident to the rights of homestead guaranteed to them by the Constitution. Any recitals, statements, stipulations or covenants incorporated in the mortgage to' prevent the pleading or proving this fact, or having that effect, if any; according to the legal construction thereof, were in violation of the Constitution in force at the time of its execution and against its policy, and are void. Klink v. Knoble, supra.

The facts stated in the answer are sufficient to constitute a defense, and the demurrer to the same was properly overruled.

2- pleading-: Amend-mg c o m-o««a= Probandi, The court below erred in dismissing the action at the cost ° of plaintiff, because he refused to amend. The defects in A the complaint, if any, having been supplied by the answer, there was no necessity for amending. The cause was issue upon the filing of the answer; the burden of proof was on the defendants, and the court should have proceeded3. . to a hearing, which does not appear from the transcript to have been done, unless the plaintiff failed or refused to prosecute his action.

The order dismissing the action is reversed, and this cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

The Hon. J. R. Erkin did not sit in this case.