Blair v. Mayer

124 N.W. 721, 24 S.D. 563, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 10
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 N.W. 721 (Blair v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blair v. Mayer, 124 N.W. 721, 24 S.D. 563, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 10 (S.D. 1910).

Opinion

YVIIITIXG, P. J.

This action was brought to quiet the title to a certain tract of land in Hughes county. It appears that the plaintiffs were, at the time this action was brought, and had been at all times hereinafter mentioned, husband and wife. The husband in 1890 filed a homestead claim upon the land in question, under the general homestead laws of the United States. He made final proof in March, 1895, receiving the final . receiver’s receipt, which showed that the land was taken as a homestead. Patent issued to him in 1902. In October, 1895, the husband, by warranty deed, conveyed his title to this land to his wife. Over Mefendants’s objection it was shown that this deed was without consideration, was executed without the wife’s knowledge, and that it was given solely to protect the wife in case of the husband’s .death. In 1892 the plaintiffs executed a note secured by a mortgage on another piece of real estate. This mortgage was foreclosed in 1895,. and on special execution the land mortgaged was sold, and deficiency reported by sheriff. In 1897 the judgment creditor caused general execution to issue, and same was levied on the land in suit as the property of plaintiff’s; nothing connected with the levy or return thereon showing that the property was levied on as the separate property of either plaintiff. This land was sold under such execution, and afterwards sheriff’s deed issued, and through a chain of convey[564]*564anees any rights that were acquired under such sheriff’s deed passed to the appellant herein. • Upon the trial findings and decree entered for plaintiffs; and a motion for new trial having been denied, the defendant Sarah A. Mayer appealed. It stands admitted that 'she is the sole party in interest as defendant.

The respondents claim that no title passed by the purported sheriff’s sale, for the reason that the land could not be sold for the debt contracted before the patent issued. Further, they claim that the evidence sustains the court’s findings to the effect that this land, at time of such sale, was the homestead of respondents under the state law, and, further, they claim that, for certain reasons alleged, the execution was invalid, and the proceedings thereunder irregular, thus rendering the sale void. The learned trial court held with respondents on the above propositions; and, if its holding was correct on the first proposition, it is conclusive of the right's of the parties herein, and renders it un necessary -to' consider any assignments based on evidence or ruling pertaining to any other feature of the case.

Stated briefly, the proposition before us is this: Where a homestead entryman, after final proof, but before patent issues, conveys the homestead land -to his wife, does such land become subject to lien of judgment against her, where such judgment was rendered upon a joint indebtedness of husband and wife, contracted long prior to final proof? It will be noticed.that the above query leaves out all reference to the transfer being tnerely colorable, and is founded on facts undisputed herein. So far as we have been able to discover, thi's exact proposition has never been before the courts; but it would nevertheless seem to us that certain other matters have been fully settled by adjudications of this and other courts' that must determine the above question in favor of respondents. It must be remembered that as the basis of this discussion we ‘have the United States homestead laws and the reasons for their enactment. It has been held by a long line of decisions that the matters of disposing of the public lands, as to when, for how long, and for what debts they shall pass exempt to the government’s grantee, are matters entirely beyond the power of state legislation to control.

[565]*565In Wallowa, etc., v. Riley, 29 Or. 289, 45 Pac. 766, 54 Am. St. Rep. 794, it was well said: “In pursuance of this power, and with a view to encourage the settlement of the public domain, Congress has invited heads of families to settle upon small parcels thereof, and make for themselves homes, with the assurance that in no event shall the land become liable to the satis • faction of any debt contracted prior to the issuing of the patent, although in the meantime the settler may become the owner of the equitable -title.” Under the above theory it is held that the federal statute means just as it reads, -that even though the equitable title is in the claimant through final proof made, .yet the land is exempt from debts contracted up to date of issuance of patent, and, further, that this is more than a right of exemption personal to claimant, but is a condition running with the land, so that the land remains exempt from debts of entry-men when the title has passed to other parties. It has even been held that this condition follows the title back to the claimant should he ever become repossessed of the title to the land. Brandhoefer v. Bain et al., 45 Neb. 781, 64 N. W. 213. In the case of Gold v. Tucker, 20 S. D. 226, 105 N. W. 624, it was held, in line with many authorities, that upon death of claimant after final proof, but before patent issued, the title to homestead lands would not vest by succession or devise, but by grant from the government, and that this grant attached to it, in favor of the grantee, all the conditions in favor of such grantee as would have attached if the original claimant had been grantee.

It is also- well established under the authorities that the conditions above referred to follow the land, even if the claimant wholly abandons it as a homestead, after final proof. These federal statutes thus established much more -than an exemption law in favor of the land merely as a homestead. But, considering the homestead feature of the federal laws, we must recognize that these laws are for the benefit of the home, of the family taken as a whole, and should be as liberally construed as a state homestead law, so that the evident purpose of the laws may be effected that -the family may all be protected -thereby. That this law, taken as a whole, is intended for the benefit and' protection [566]*566of the family has been held where the husband had entered into agreement, before entry on land, whereby he was to convey land' to wife after patent issued. It was held that such agreement did not conflict with provisions against agreements to sell. Barlow v. Barlow, 47 Kan. 676, 28 Pac. 607. That this law must be intended to protect the wife is evidenced by the fact that, if the husband dies, all his right's pass to the wife. Why? Because the law looks not to the individuals, but, through the individuals, to the home and family. Thus in this case, if the husband had died before executing the deed to his wife, but after final proof, and this land had not been conveyed to any one, the patent would have issued to the wife, vesting the absolute title to the land in her exempt from any debt of hers then in existence, including the debt upon which the judgment was entered. Supposing the husband had died after executing the deed to his wife, but before patent issued, the legal title would pass to her from the government by patent, and this legal title would be absolutely exempt from any prior indebtedness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W. 721, 24 S.D. 563, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-mayer-sd-1910.