While I concur in the result reached by the majority, the majority's focus upon divestiture of vested property rights to justify that result is misplaced. As the majority states, "Ransom requires further explanation."
The thrust of the majority opinion in the instant case is such that, had Ransom been differently postured — that is, had the wife died and the husband brought suit challenging the constitutional validity of the homestead statute — he would have lost, because otherwise divestiture of the wife's heirs would have occurred. Certainly, this cannot be a correct reading of Ransom, for the Ransom Court did not single out the posture of the case as being determinative of the outcome. Rather, after holding the statute void on its face, the Court breathed life into the Act by extending homestead benefits to widowers through statutory construction, thereby removing the gender-based constitutional defect. The posture of the case was not determinative of the statute's constitutional validity.
This is not to say, however, that the posture would be unimportant under all circumstances. Rather, the prospective or retroactive effect accorded Ransom does not turn on the fortuity of the sex of the survivor, that is, the policy considerations inherent in deciding what effect to give Ransom remain the same regardless of who brought the initial challenge to the Act's validity.
What are those considerations and what result do they mandate? Whenever a court contemplates changing the law through judicial decision, it faces two opposing forces: 1) the need and propriety of declaring a law unconstitutional or of conforming the law to constitutional standards or to changes in society; and 2) the need for maintaining stability and certainty in the law. See Comment, Prospective Application ofJudicial Decisions, 33 Ala.L.Rev. 463 (1982). When the need for change in the law, by statutory construction or otherwise, clearly outweighs the disadvantages accruing therefrom, the judicial decision instituting the change may be applied; 1) retroactively, governing conduct occurring both before *Page 232 and after the decision, including the conduct of the parties before the court; 2) prospectively, not applicable to parties before the court, or to legal events involving others not challenging existing law before the effective date of the decision; or 3) quasi-prospectively, which is identical to 2 above, except that the ruling of the court is also made applicable to the parties then before the court.
The main justifications for quasi-prospective application have been stated:
"See Jackson v. City of Florence, 294 Ala. 592, 599-600,320 So.2d 68, 75 (1975) (quasi-prospective application `recognizes the efforts of the plaintiff initiating the action')." 33 Ala.L.Rev. at 474."[F]irst, to make an announcement binding precedent rather than mere dictum; . . . and second, to reward successful appellants and thereby provide an incentive for litigants to challenge existing rules of law that are in need of reform.[fn*]"
As a general rule, quasi-prospective application of judicial holdings finds its field of operation in situations where the holding extends, or creates, new protections and rights not before recognized. The Jackson Court, for example, contrary to previous holdings, interpreted a 1907 statute to permit prosecution of civil actions against a municipality. The quasi-prospective effect given the Miranda and Escobedo decisions by the United States Supreme Court, extending protections under the 5th and 6th Amendments, respectively, are other examples.1
Ordinarily, on the other hand, a decision holding a statute facially unconstitutional, thus void ab initio, should be applied retroactively. Only the strongest of public policy considerations can justify quasi-prospective application only of such holdings. Nonetheless, for the sake of stability, I find those compelling considerations here. The desirability (indeed, the necessity) of maintaining the status quo with respect to all those land titles resulting from interests already vested under the homestead statute far outweighs the disrupting effect upon such titles that would otherwise result.
Therefore, I agree with the majority's holding to the extent that the totality of the holding in Ransom should not be applied retroactively, thereby defeating the expectations of those who have "justifiably and reasonably relied on the laws of this state." 434 So.2d at 231. The quasi-prospective application of Ransom, a rule of pragmatism justified on grounds of public policy, however, must avoid the obvious unfairness inherent in rejecting any challenge pending at the effective date of the Ransom decision. In other words, the homestead statute, as construed in Ransom, should apply to: 1) all such controversies arising from legal incidents (i.e., the date of death of the one whose estate is involved) occurring subsequent to the effective date of Ransom;2 and 2) all such controversies arising prior to Ransom, pending at Ransom's effective date, in which the same constitutional challenge was made. Otherwise, the outcome of a separate case, wherein a similar challenge was made, may hinge on the fortuity of how much time was required to decide that case.
To illustrate No. 2 above, assume, for example, that Plaintiff X in Year 1 commences a suit wherein Statute A is challenged as being unconstitutional. In Year 2, Plaintiff Y commences a suit wherein Statute A is challenged on the same ground. This Court decides Y's suit favorably to him in Year 3, stating that the decision is to be applied only to those actions commenced after the effective date of decision. In Year 4, this Court decides *Page 233 Plaintiff X's case. Should X be prevented from prevailing on his identical challenge just because, fortuitously, Y's challenge, though commenced after X's, was decided first? The answer is self-evident.
As the majority opinion points out, the constitutional challenge in the instant case was made subsequent to this Court's release of Ransom. To be sure, Ransom was cited as the basis for the challenge. Because Mr. Hicks's controversy concerning the statute's application arose from legal incidents occurring before the Ransom decision (and before 1977), which expanded homestead rights, and because Mr. Hicks had no pending constitutional challenge to the statute's validity at Ransom's effective decision date, he should not prevail on his homestead claim.3
A final point of clarification concerning the effect accordedRansom is in order. In Ransom, the challengers prevailed in getting the homestead statute declared unconstitutional, but failed in their effort to prevent the widow from taking homestead. At first blush, this posture appears to complicate the analysis regarding what effect to accord the Ransom decision, because, ordinarily, the successful challenger prevails on his underlying claim. Furthermore, the Legislature amended the homestead statute, effective October 31, 1977, using gender-neutral language, thereby eliminating, statutorily, the constitutional defect found in Ransom, where the husband's death occurred before the amendment. This statutory amendment eliminates constitutional challenges arising from homestead controversaries where the death of a spouse occurred after the amendment. See Craig v. Root,247 Ala. 479, 25 So.2d 147 (1946) (estate created governed by statute in effect at intestate's death). When we speak of the effective date of Ransom as the date from which prospectivity applies, it must be remembered that the amended statute, in practical effect, pushes the line of demarcation back from 1981, the date of Ransom, to October 31, 1977, when the amendment cured the constitutional defect.
Although these complicating factors should be recognized, and do cause some concern, they are not of such overriding significance as to prevent Ransom from being accorded the same treatment, regarding retroactivity and prospectivity, as it otherwise should be accorded. Without regard to who prevailed in Ransom, the two separate aspects of the holding need to be treated differently: 1) The Court held the homestead statute facially invalid; and 2) the Court remedied the constitutional defect through judicial construction. If we apply the totality of the holding in Ransom quasi-prospectively only, we create the anomaly of permitting the wife to succeed on claims for homestead in all cases where her husband's death occurred before October 31, 1977, while dooming to failure the husband's claim in all similarly situated cases, thus perpetuating the identical unequal application of the statute which the Ransom Court condemned as unconstitutional.
To avoid this anomalous result, the holding in Ransom, establishing the statute's unconstitutionality, should be applied retroactively to those parties, including husbands and wives, who had no claim pending or adjudicated with respect to homestead rights accruing from the death of a spouse beforeRansom. Stated differently, no heir or spouse should be able to claim under the original defective statute, having not done so before Ransom established its unconstitutionality. Because of the overriding interest in protecting titles to homestead properties vested before Ransom, however, the unconstitutionality determination should not be retroactively applied in any manner which would jeopardize title to homestead property already set aside and vested in any spouse, heir, or their heirs and assigns, when Ransom was decided. *Page 234
The judicial construction remedying the constitutional defect, on the other hand, should be applied only quasi-prospectively. In practical effect, however, becauseRansom was decided in 1981, and because the statutory amendment became effective October 31, 1977, no field of operation exists for prospective application of Ransom.
Applying all of the foregoing principles to the case before us, I agree with the majority that Mr. Hicks cannot prevail. As previously stated, he neither had a pending claim challenging the constitutionality of the statute on the effective date ofRansom, nor can he take advantage, retroactively, of Ransom's holding of the statute's unconstitutionality.