Byam v. Albright

162 P. 10, 94 Wash. 108, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1275
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1916
DocketNo. 13601
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 162 P. 10 (Byam v. Albright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byam v. Albright, 162 P. 10, 94 Wash. 108, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1275 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Parker, J. —

The plaintiff, Cornelia Byam, commenced this action in the superior court for Mason county seeking a decree quieting her title to a forty-acre tract of land in that county which she claims as her separate property and her homestead. The defendants Lon Albright and Dora W. Troutman claim interest in the land under an execution sale. C. P. Byam, the plaintiff’s husband, was made a defendant to the end that her title might be quieted as against any community claim he might make to the land. Trial upon the merits resulted in findings and decree in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for, from which the defendants Albright and Trout-man have appealed.

At all times since prior to the year 1912, respondent and defendant C. P. Byam were, and now are, husband and wife. In January of that year a Mrs. Adams conveyed to respondent the land in question, which conveyance was, as claimed by respondent, in consideration of money paid by her son, who caused the conveyance to be so made as a gift to her from him. The trial court found that the land was so acquired by respondent as a gift from her son, and concluded that it thereby became her separate property. In July, 1912, respondent duly executed and filed for record in the office of the auditor of Mason county her declaration claiming the land as a homestead, her husband never having filed any declaration of homestead. The value of the land and improvements thereon has at no time exceeded the sum of $2,000.

In the spring of 1912, the community consisting of rer spondent and defendant C. P. Byam had become indebted to appellant Albright in the sum of $645, for the recovery of which he commenced an action in the superior court for Mason county in April of that year. In May, 1913, judgment was rendered in that action for the amount claimed. [110]*110Looking aloné to the language of that judgment, there is ground for arguing that it was a judgment against respondent individually as well as against the community and C. P. Byam, though considering it in the light of the allegations of the complaint in that action, there is room for argument to the contrary. For argument’s sake, we shall proceed upon the assumption that the land in question became subject to the satisfaction of that judgment, unless exempt therefrom because of respondent’s declaration and claim of homestead. This will render it unnecessary for us to further notice the questions of the judgment being rendered against respondent individually and the land being her separate property, as to which contentions are made in appellants’ behalf. Execution being issued upon that judgment, the land was sold in pursuance thereof by the sheriff of Mason county in August, 1913, and no redemption thereof being made, the sheriff executed his deed therefor in August, 1914, to appellant Dora W. Troutman, who was the purchaser at the sale.

The contention of appellants here to be considered is that respondent lost her homestead right in the land by abandonment, consisting of her and her husband’s removal from the land and from the state of Washington and taking up their residence in the state of Oklahoma before its sale in pursuance of the execution. Touching the question of the residence of respondent and her husband, the trial court found, in substance, that they resided and made their home thereon intending to make that their home in the future, though they absented themselves therefrom and from the state for a period of nearly two years after the filing of the homestead declaration. It is insisted that the evidence calls for findings to the effect that respondent and her husband did abandon their residence upon the land and acquire a residence in the state of Oklahoma before its sale under the execution, from which it is argued that respondent thereby lost her homestead right and rendered the land subject to sale under the execution in [111]*111satisfaction of the judgment rendered in favor of appellant Albright.

A painstaking review of the evidence leads us to the conviction that, for a year or more prior to the filing of the homestead declaration by respondent, she and her husband had been, and were then, actually making their home upon the land, and that they then intended to continue their home thereon. It is true her husband had been away a considerable portion of that period, but his absence was caused by his business taking him to several different places in the middle western states and did not result in his acquiring a home in any other place. To this extent, at least, we agree with the findings of fact made by the trial court touching the question of their residence and home upon the land. It is plain that such residence complied with Rem. Code, § 552, which provides that “the homestead must be actually intended and used for a home for the claimants.” This provision, as was held in Wentworth v. McDonald, 78 Wash. 546, 139 Pac. 503, has reference only to the qualifications of a claimant to assert his homestead right at the time of filing his homestead declaration, and not to the continuing of such right thereafter. We conclude, therefore, that respondent was then entitled to, and did, perfect her homestead right to the land by the filing of her declaration.

Now, whether or not the land thereafter ceased to remain exempt as a homestead because of the abandonment by respondent and her husband of their residence thereon by removal therefrom to another state, assuming for argument’s sake such to be the fact, is quite another question. This question, we think, must also be answered in respondent’s favor. We prefer, however, to rest this answer upon the provisions of the homestead statute limiting the manner of abandoning homesteads, rather than upon the somewhat unsatisfactory ground, in the light of the evidence, that respondent and her husband retained their residence upon the land, as found by the trial court. Proceeding upon the theory that respondent [112]*112and her husband became nonresidents of the state after the filing of the declaration, counsel for appellants invoke the general rule that a homestead right is abandoned and the property ceases to be exempt by the removal of the claimant therefrom, especially by removal from the state. Many decisions of the courts are called to our attention so holding. These decisions, however, deal with statutes making continued residence upon the homestead after its acquisition necessary to the continuing exemption right of the claimant, or with statutes which directly or by plain inference limit the continuance of all exemption rights of the claimant to the time of the claimant’s residence within the state. None of them deal with the continuing exemption right of the claimant under a statute like ours, which not only prescribes an exclusive manner of selecting the homestead and evidencing such selection by public record, but also in express terms prescribes an exclusive manner of abandoning the homestead and the exemption right therein. Our present law defining and exempting the homestead is an act complete within itself. Laws of 1895, pp. 109-114 (Rem. Code, §§ 528-561) ; Wentworth v. McDonald, 78 Wash. 546, 139 Pac. 503. Touching the questions of the commencement and termination of the homestead right, we find in that act the following:

“A homestead can be abandoned only by a declaration of abandonment, or a grant thereof, executed and acknowledged, —(1) By the husband and wife if the claimant is married; . . .” Laws of 1895, p. 110, § 7; Rem. Code, § 535.
“A declaration of abandonment is effectual only

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 P. 10, 94 Wash. 108, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byam-v-albright-wash-1916.