Oswald v. McCauley

Carl and, J.

The appellants, being judgment creditors of respondents, commenced an action in the district court of Cass county, for the purpose of subjecting the property hereinafter mentioned to the lien of their judgment. The respondents claimed the same as a homestead. The trial court found that respondent Frank B. McCauley owned an undivided half of lots 2 and 3 in block 2 of Keeny & Devitt’s addition to the city of Fargo; that respondent Benjamin P. Reynolds owned an undivided one-half of said lot 3, but had no interest in said lot 2; that McCauley had occupied with his family the second story of the buildings on lots 2 and 3 as a place of residence for more than three years, using the first floor thereof as a place of business; that respondent Reynolds owned and occupied lot 4 in block 2 of said addition as a place of residence for himself and family, and occupied the ground floor of said lot 3 as a place of business, lot 3 being contiguous to lot 4; that Reynolds and wife had filed their certificate of homestead for lot 4, and the half interest in lot 3, as required by law; that McCauley and wife had filed their certificate of homestead for their half interest in lots 2 and 3; that each of said lots was twenty-five by one hundred and forty feet, and that the whole of the three lots were less than one acre in extent. The trial court held the premises to be the homesteads, respectively, of Frank B. McCauley and Benjamin P. Reynolds, and not subject to the lien of the judgment of appellants.

*292It will thus be seen that the only question presented by the record is, can a homestead be claimed in this territory in an undivided interest in land ? In determining this question it must be borne in mind that this is a contest between a creditor and the homestead claimant, and what we shall have to say must be considered as expressing our views in cases where the creditor is contesting the homestead right, rather than where a co-tenant or owner of the land is contesting it. On grounds of public policy the legislature, in order to preserve the integrity of the family from the disasters resulting from the varying fortunes of men, has withdrawn from the reach of the creditor the property of the debtor which is used by his family as a home. The legislature has in no wise prescribed that this right of homestead shall depend upon the character of the estate owned by the debtor or homestead claimant, and it seems to us that a court which will, in the face of the principles underlying the establishment of this right of homestead, seek to destroy it merely on the ground that in some instances it is difficult to carve out the homestead, will find its déeision based ttpon difficulties more apparent than real.

Wé believe the true test to be that if the homestead, if not exempt, could be sold on execution, then it is property in which a homestead can be claimed as against a creditor. Take the case at bar. If these appellants should purchase at execution sale the interest of these respondents in the premises described, would they have any difficulty in obtaining partition ? Still they say to these respondents : “You can claim no homestead in these premises, because you cannot carve out a homestead from them.” We think that by virtue of section 14, chapter 38, of the Political Code, the court is authorized at all times to ascertain and define the homestead. In this case, however, the appellants are not in a position to urge the matter of difficulty in carving out the respondents’ homesteads, as the premises are within a town plat, and do not exceed one acre in extent. We are aware that the decisions are not uniform on the question of whether a homestead can be claimed in an undivided interest in land — Vermont, Iowa, Texas, Kansas, New Hampshire and Arkansas holding in the affirmative, and Massachusetts, California, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan in the negative. As the statute of this territory *293has not limited the right of homestead to any particular estate in land, and as we believe the legislature intended to withdraw from the reach of the creditor the property used as a home by the debtor, we shall concur in the views expressed by Mr. Freeman in his work on Co-Tenancy and Partition, § 5é: “ But we see no sufficient reason, even in the absence of statutes bearing directly upon the subject, for holding that a general homestead act does not apply to lands held in co-tenancy. The fact that a homestead claim might savor of such an assumption of an exclusive right as is inconsistent with the rights of the other co-tenant, and that the maintenance of such claim might interfere with proceedings for partition, form no very satisfactory reason for denying the exemption. If the rights of the other co-tenant are threatened or endangered, he alone should be permitted to call for protection and redress. The law will not sanction any use of the homestead in prejudice of his rights. But as long as his interests are respected, or so nearly respected that he feels no inclination to complain, why should some person having no interest in the co-tenancy be allowed to avail himself of the law of co-tenancy for his own and not for a co-tenant’s gain ? The homestead laws have an object perfectly well understood, and in the promotion of which courts may well employ the most liberal and humane rules of interpretation. This object is to assure to the unfortunate debtor, and his equally unfortunate but more helpless family, the shelter and influence of home. A co-tenant may lawfully occupy every parcel of the lands of the co-tenancy. He may employ them not merely for cultivation or for other means of making profits, but may also build houses and barns, plant shrubs and flowers, and surround himself with all the comforts of home. His wife and children may of right occupy and enjoy the premises with him. Upon the land, of which he is but a part owner, he may, and in fact he frequently does, obtain all the advantages of a home. These advantages are none the less worthy of being secured to him and his family in adversity because the other co-tenants are entitled to equal advantages in the same home. That he has not the whole is a very unsatisfactory and a very inhumane reason for depriving him of that which he has.” Mr. Thompson, in his work on Homesteads and Exemptions, § 188, says: “ One can easily *294imagine cases where the rule that there can be no homestead in estates held in common would work peculiar hardship to poor debtors, and defeat the apparent purposes of the homestead laws. Thus, the parents die, leaving two sons, their sole heirs, in possession of the home farm. They, finding the premises incapable of an equitable partition without sale, and knowing that the property would be sacrificed by sale, determine to reside together, with their respective families, in the common dwelling, and work the farm in common. Under the view animadverted upon, neither can claim a homestead therein as against creditors, although the value of his interest is less than the value of the statutory exemption. But it is not necessary to search the imagination for hard cases, for the books furnish them. Thus, in one case the right of homestead was denied in lands held by a husband, his wife, and their child as tenants in common. It was also denied in favor of a creditor to a tenant who was the sole occupant of premises, holding title to an undivided seventeen-eighteenths of the entire estate, which title he had purchased under the belief, that he had acquired the entire estate. The absurdity of such rulings is illustrated by the fact that if he had been a naked trespasser disputing the title of the real owner the same court would have accorded to-him the benefit of the exemption as against his creditor.” ¥e prefer to base our decision upon the law construed by the aid of humane principles, rather than upon the technical doctrine of ab inoonvementi, and, therefore, hold that the lower court did not err in adjudging that the respondents were entitled to claim a homestead in land held as co-tenants. Judgment affirmed.