Archibald v. Jacobs

6 S.W. 177, 69 Tex. 248, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 813
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1887
DocketNo. 2367
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 6 S.W. 177 (Archibald v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archibald v. Jacobs, 6 S.W. 177, 69 Tex. 248, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 813 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

This action was brought by A. C. Jacobs and his wife to recover a house and lot in the town' of Henrietta. The property once belonged to Jacobs, but on July, 4, 1884, he made an assignment of all his property, other than such as was exempt from forced sale, for the benefit of such of his creditors as would consent to take under it, and release him The assignment was made under the statute. Archibald was made the assignee, qualified and took charge of the estate, and sold [250]*250the property in controversy to the defendant Welborne. Jacobs was a merchant, doing business, at the time of the assignment, in a house in the town of Henrietta, which he then owned, and had used for the purposes of his business for more than a year. He was also doing business in another house in the same town, which he rented, but neither of these houses were in any way connected with the property in controversy; in fact, the one which he used, and in which he seems to have done a large business, was in another part of the town. He was also carrying on a mercantile business in another town on rented premises, and owned and occupied one or more residences in the town of Henrietta, distant from, and in no way connected with, the property in controversy.

At the time of the assignment he had commenced building a house on the lot in controversy, but no part of it was in condition to use, or had been used by him for any business or residence purpose. The lot was not paid for, and was encumbered with a vendor’s lien for about five hundred dollars. After the assignment the assignee, out of the trust funds in his hands, discharged this lien and also an attachment lien for about nine hundred dollars. He also completed the unfinished house on the lot, and in this expended over one thousand eight hundred dollars of the trust funds. All these expenditures seem to have been made at the request of Jacobs, with the consent, perhaps, of some of his principal creditors. After the house was finished the assignee placed the several assigned stocks of goods in it and used it in disposing of them, Jacobs serving him as an employe on a monthly salary.

Jacobs now asserts that he intended the property for a business home and residence when he commenced to improve it, and claims that it thus became covered by the homestead exemption and did not pass to the assignee by the assignment. This action has for its foundation-this claim, and none other.

The court below permitted evidence to be introduced, tending to show that Jacobs may have intended at some time to use the upper story of the building as a residence and the lower story as a business house, and this evidence consisted of acts and declarations of Jacobs and wife since, as well as before, the assignment was made, and on the other side much evidence was introduced to show that he never intended to make any part of it his residence, and that the claim now asserted was an afterthought. There are twenty-one assignments of error presented [251]*251In the brief of counsel, relating to the admission and rejection of evidence, the giving and refusing of charges, and the action of the court in refusing to grant a new trial, but their consideration in detail is not necessary.

If everything the plaintiffs evidence tended to prove be conceded to have been established, how stands the case? We have an insolvent debtor owning and actually using a residence and business house in no way connected with the property in controversy, but he had commenced to improve this property, and intended at some future time to use it as a residence and place of business. This is the full force of the appellee’s case. There can be no doubt that the property on which they resided at the time the assignment was made was the residence homestead protected from forced sale, and they could not divest it of that character by an intention to abandon it at some future time, even though that intention was evidenced by the fact that they had commenced to improve the property in controversy with intent to use a part of it as a residence when it might be completed.

Abandonment of property actually homestead, can not be accomplished by mere intention; there must be a discontinuance of the use coupled with an intention not again to use as a home to constitute abandonment; and without an abandonment of an existing homestead no right can exist to fix that cheracter to another property, unless it be by way of addition to the existing homestead.

The residence homestead existing at the time the assignment was made consisted of the lot or lots resided upon or used for home purposes, and there can be no pretense of any purpose on the part of the appellees to devote the property in controversy to a residence use other than one which would have made it the home of the family instead of the property which was actually the home. There could not be two places of residence for the family, separate and in no manner used together, and it must be held that the home in fact existing at the time the assignment was made was the only property which the appellees could claim as the residence homestead.

Where no homestead dedicated by actual occupancy exists, effect must be given to ownership, intention and preparation to use for a home, or otherwise one indebted might never be able to secure a home for a dependent family. This was recognized in Franklin v. Coffee, 18 Texas, 417, and in other cases; Barnes [252]*252v. White, 53 Texas, 628; Swope v. Stantzenberger, 59 Texas, 390; Gardner v. Douglass, 64 Texas; 79; but no case was given to the extent of holding when there was a home in fact that this might be abandoned while actually used as the home of the family, and another homestead acquired by intention at some time in the future to use it as a home accompanied with preparation to so improve it as to make it suitable for such a use.

What has been said as to the residence homestead is equally true of the business homestead. The property owned and used by A. 0. Jacobs as his place of business was the only property he could claim to be exempt from forced sale, on account of such use at the time the assignment was made. That property may have been old and insecure, but it was the only place of business upon which the acts of its owner had fixed a homestead character. As he made it, so must the law regard it. Conceding, every fact to have been proved as the evidence for the appellees tends to prove, still it must be held that the property in controversy was not the homestead, nor a part of the homestead of appellees at the time A. C. Jacobs made the assignment through which the appellant Welborne claims. The acts and declarations of the appellees and of the assignee, made after the assignment, should have been excluded, as should have been the trust deed in favor of Willis & Brother, for none of these matters could have any bearing on the question of homestead.

The court, among other charges, gave the following: “To. constitute a use of property for homestead purposes, or as a substitute for homestead purposes, the person claiming the same must not only intend to dedicate the same for homestead purposes, but must actually occupy it for such purposes, or must take such steps toward preparing the same for use and occupancy as a homestead as reasonably to-give notice of his intention to use and occupy the property, either as a home or a place to exercise his calling or business.”

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W. 177, 69 Tex. 248, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archibald-v-jacobs-tex-1887.