Bliss v. White

272 N.W. 769, 132 Neb. 651, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 241
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1937
DocketNo. 29946
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 272 N.W. 769 (Bliss v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bliss v. White, 272 N.W. 769, 132 Neb. 651, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 241 (Neb. 1937).

Opinion

Clements, District Judge.

This action arises from the levy of an execution upon real estate claimed to be the homestead of debtors and the sale of the real estate upon the execution. Upon motion of the debtor the sale was set aside by the trial court and the case comes here on appeal.

In the trial of this case no evidence was offered by the judgment creditor, appellant herein. The facts in the case must be gathered from the evidence presented by the appellees.

A summary of this evidence shows that Daniel 0. Cleghorn and Maude E. Cleghorn are husband and wife. For about 30 years prior to the trial in this case, Mr. Cleghorn had been and then was a railroad conductor running out of Chadron, Nebraska, on the Northwestern railroad.

At the time the controversy in this case arose, Mr. Cleghorn owned three pieces of real estate in Chadron — a house and lot on Shelton street, a house on Main street and a house on King street. The properties on Shelton and King streets are under foreclosure. It does not appear that the Main street property is mortgaged, but it is under lease by the terms of which the rental is applied upon a note owed by Mr. Cleghorn.

In 1928 Mrs. Cleghorn acquired a small tract of land about ten miles south of the city of Chadron and built some buildings thereon. It appears that Mr. Cleghorn furnished the money for this enterprise, but the title to the property was taken in the name of his wife and the property has always been considered as belonging to her. The buildings constructed on this tract consisted of a main building and garage used by Mrs. Cleghorn as a residence during the summer months, and a number of smaller buildings used for rental purposes. Ever since she acquired the property and built the buildings Mrs. Cleghorn has operated it as a summer camp for tourists and others.

Owing to the fact that Mr. Cleghorn’s business required [653]*653him to be on the road a large part of the time and to Mrs. Cleghorn’s business enterprise, the residence of these people at times has been very uncertain. Mr. Cleghorn kept a room in the Shelton street house which he occupied as a sleeping apartment when he was not out at the summer camp. The Shelton street property is an apartment house consisting of four apartments and two rooms. At the time the summer camp property was acquired the Cleghorn’s were occupying one apartment in the house. The other apartments were rented. After the building of the residence at the summer camp the Cleghorns gave up their apartment in the Shelton street house, reserving the one room where Mr. Cleghorn slept. The reason for -reserving this room seems to have been the necessity of Mr. Cleghorn having a place in Chadron where he could be called for duty. In the winter months the Cleghorns reserved two rooms and the basement in the Shelton street property where they lived during the cold months. In the summer Mrs. Cleghorn lived at the summer camp and Mr. Cleghorn was there with her as much of the time as he was able from his duties as a conductor.

Up to the time that this litigation arose the parties never seemed to have made any formal selection of a homestead.

Some time subsequent to the time Mrs. Cleghorn acquired the summer camp, she became indebted by reason of certain notes she signed as surety/ and on the 18th day of-March, 1931, a judgment in the sum of $2,850.76 was rendered against her in the district court for Dawes county on these notes. On February 27, 1936, an execution was issued on this judgment, levied upon the summer camp property, and this property was advertised for sale to satisfy this judgment.

On March 30, 1936, Maude E. Cleghorn and Daniel 0. Cleghorn caused a notice to be served upon the sheriff holding the execution that they claimed a homestead in this property, that it does not exceed in value the sum of $2,000 and is exempt from forced sale. The sheriff took no action on this notice but sold the property to the judgment creditor [654]*654for the sum of $900. On April 4, 1936, Maude E. Cleghorn filed a motion in the district court for Dawes county, as follows:

“Comes now the defendant Maude E. Cleghorn, and moves the court to set aside and vacate the sheriff’s sale under execution held on March 31, 1936, for each of the following reasons, to-wit:

“1. That the property levied on and sold by the sheriff under the execution, in this action, was exempt to the defendant Cleghorn as a homestead.

“2. That, after the levy of the execution and before the sale, said defendant and her husband had served on the sheriff and Lee Card, attorney for plaintiff, a written notice claiming the real estate levied upon as a homestead, and that the same was, therefore, exempt from sale on execution, and that the judgment creditor failed to have claimants’ homestead right determined, as provided by sections 40-105 and 40-106, Compiled Statutes of Nebraska, 1929.”

A copy of said notice was attached to the motion.

It is from the court’s ruling on this motion setting aside the sale that the appellant appeals and brings this case here.

The appellant contends, first, that the execution was issued upon an indebtedness of the wife, was levied upon her separate property, that she was not the head of the family, and that a notice signed -by her did not require the sheriff to take the statutory steps to determine the homestead, and that the parties could not select a homestead from her property; second, that the evidence shows that the property in question was not the homestead of the claimants; that they had a homestead elsewhere in property belonging to the head of the family.

The first contention of appellant is answered by our holding in Quigley v. McEvony, 41 Neb. 73, 59 N. W. 767. In this case writ of attachment was levied upon the separate property of Sarah A. Quigley and for her individual debt. She was a married woman residing at the time with her husband in Sioux City, Iowa. The property levied upon [655]*655was a residence in O’Neill, Nebraska. Mrs. Quigley caused a notice to be served on the sheriff that she claimed the property as a homestead. The sheriff disregarded the notice, judgment was rendered in the attachment proceedings and an order to sell the premises issued. Mrs. Quigley brought an action to enjoin the sale and have the property declared to be a homestead. The attaching creditor made the same contentions which are advanced here, namely,. Mrs. Quigley was not the head of a family; a notice signed! by her did not require the sheriff to determine the homestead; the evidence did not support the court’s judgment that she was entitled to a homestead in the O’Neill property. In this case we held that the notice signed by the wife, the owner of the property, was sufficient, using this language:

“A statutory exemption of a homestead was intended and enacted in the interest of, and for the benefit of, the debtor, and it is the policy of the law that such enactments be liberally construed, so that the intention of the legislature shall be enforced or carried out to its fullest and greatest extent.

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Related

J. H. Melville Lumber Co. v. Maroney
16 N.W.2d 527 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 N.W. 769, 132 Neb. 651, 1937 Neb. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliss-v-white-neb-1937.