delivered the opinion of the court:
Appellant sets up in her bill the proceedings in Barkman v. Barkman, 94 Ill. App. 440, and insists that the judgment of the Appellate Court in that case is res judicata of the question of homestead here involved. In this contention we think appellant misapprehends the effect of that proceeding. It was supplemental to the original decree of divorce, and sought to change the same by adding to an order cutting off appellant’s dower and homestead, and a holding was made in the circuit court that the granting' of alimony in the sum of §4000 in gross and the order for the lease to appellant of the homestead for two years were in lieu of and in full of all rights of alimony, homestead and dower. The only question before the Appellate Court was the power of the circuit court to change the decree in these regards at a term subsequent to the term at which the original decree was entered. The Appellate Court held the circuit court had no such power, and for that purpose did not have jurisdiction of the cause. Having found that the circuit court did not have jurisdiction and having reversed the' decree of the circuit court upon that ground, that ended the duty and power of the Appellate Court, and anything said by the Appellate Court in its opinion as to the rights of the parties as to homestead and dower was aside from the question before it, and cannot be urged as res judicata when those questions are raised properly in a court having jurisdiction. The judgment of the Appellate Court left the original decree of the circuit court for divorce and alimony stand as a final decree. By the latter decree appellant, out of an estate of about §12,000 possessed by appellee, was awarded §4000 alimony and §250 solicitor’s fee, and given, free of rent, a lease on the premises here claimed as a homestead, for two years. That decree was silent as to dower and homestead rights of appellant, except that the two years’ lease was provided for.
In an action of divorce the court has full and complete jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, and it may decree the payment of money in such amounts and in such manner as to it appears just and equitable. By the statute (Hurd’s Stat. 1901, chap. 52, sec. 5,) it is provided: “In case of a divorce the court granting the divorce may dispose of the homestead estate according to the equities of the case.” The “equities of the case” may require that it be given for life, or, as in this case, for but a lirdited time, and where the decree makes no specific disposition of the homestead, its disposition must be as directed by statute. Stahl v. Stahl, 114 Ill. 375.
The case just cited is decisive of this case. In that case Catharine Stahl had obtained a divorce from Christian Stahl for extreme and repeated cruelty. The decree was silent as to homestead and dower rights. The circuit court having held that Catharine Stahl, the divorced wife of Christian Stahl, was entitled to a homestead of the value of $1000 and to dower in the remainder, this court, on appeal to it, stated (p. 379): “The circuit court erred in its decree as to homestead. Section 5, chapter 52, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, provides: ‘In case of a divorce, the court granting the divorce may dispose of the homestead estate according to the equities of the case.’ Here the court granting the divorce made no order with respect to the homestead. The disposition of it, therefore, must be as directed by statute. After the divorce the homestead estate remained and continued in Christian Stahl, the householder and owner in fee of the premises. Upon the granting of the divorce Catharine Stahl’s relation of wife to Christian Stahl was severed. She then became entirely disconnected with the homestead estate, and had no right pertaining to any property of Christian Stahl by virtue of having been his wife, except dower saved by the statute, the divorce having been for the misconduct of the husband, and the alimony which was allowed. * * * Now, if, after the divorce and before his second marriage, Christian Stahl had been minded to release or convey the homestead, he could have done so by his own deed alone, as he would have had then no wife to join with him in the deed.”
Appellant contends that the case just cited is not applicable to the case at bar. We do not admit the distinctions urged by her. It is contended in the present case that the defendant in the divorce proceedings (appellee here) had deserted the complainant, and by reason thereof the title to the homestead estate inured to complainant. The complainant, however, was g'iven a divorce on the ground of defendant’s cruelty, and an injunction was granted restraining defendant from interfering with or molesting complainant in her possession of the premises, which, under the decree, she was to have" the right to occupy for two years. Under such conditions no estate of homestead, because of alleged desertion, can be held to have vested in complainant. Besides, when the decree of divorce was granted, the court had the right to adjust the property rights of the parties, including the homestead, “according to the equities of the case,” and in doing so the question of desertion was proper to be considered by him.
Practically the same question presented here, and under a statute similar to ours, was decided, along the same line as the Stahl case, in Rosholt v. Mehus, 23 L. R. A. 239. Many of the cases urged by appellant in this case were similarly urged in that case, and the reasoning of the court there is so applicable we quote it here (p. 243): “The statute says (Comp. Laws, sec. 2585): ‘The court, in rendering a decree of divorce, may assign the homestead to the innocent party, either absolutely or for a limited period, according to the facts in the case and in consonance with the law relating to homestead. ’ It would appear from this language that the legislature, so far from intending that the homestead should pass to the innocent party by virtue of the statute alone, thought it necessary to give the court express power to so dispose of it by decree. We are entirely unable to see any good reason why, after the chancellor, in the exercise of the broad and liberal discretion in him vested, has given the innocent family every protection the circumstances admitted or their needs required, the law should then step in and transfer to them, at the expense of the husband, another and very material estate, to-wit, the homestead owned and theretofore occupied by him. Particularly must this be true when, as in this case, the decree of divorce casts upon the husband the continuing duty of supporting that family, by compelling" him to pay a certain monthly payment. It is not to be believed that the law will then grasp the very property out of which the husband must realize the money to make those payments and transfer it to the family, and yet hold him for the payments. We deem it better for the innocent party, better for the fee owner, better as a rule of property, that the interests of the respective parties in the homestead should be fixed by the decree in the divorce proceeding, and when that decree is silent, the homestead, like all other realty, must remain in the possession of the party holding the record title, discharged of all homestead rights and claims of the other party; and this we deem the result of the better authorities,”—citing Heaton v. Sawyer, 60 Vt. 495, Wiggin v. Buzzell, 58 N. H. 829, and Biffie v. Pullam, 114 Mo. 50.
The cases from this court cited by appellant on this point are not, in our judgment, in conflict with the rule announced in the Stahl case, and which we think is applicable to the case at bar. In the cases so cited the homestead right was specifically awarded in the decree of divorce, or the facts clearly showed "a desertion, and such conditions as created, under the statute, a right to the homestead in the party held to be entitled to it.
Under the facts disclosed in this case we think the decree of the circuit court was correct, and the same will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.