Clark v. Davis

226 P.2d 904, 37 Wash. 2d 850, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 384
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1951
Docket31431
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 226 P.2d 904 (Clark v. Davis) 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
Clark v. Davis, 226 P.2d 904, 37 Wash. 2d 850, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 384 (Wash. 1951).

Opinion

Schwellenbach, C. J.

This is an appeal from a portion of an order of confirmation in a partition suit, denying a petition regarding a homestead; declaring the homestead claim void; and directing that appellant’s share of the proceeds of the sale of the partitioned property be applied to the payment of a judgment in favor of respondent against appellant.

Daisy C. Davis and Evelyn D. Clark are mother and daughter. In 1943 they jointly bought a house at 2727 West Cleveland in Spokane. The daughter occupied the front apartment and the mother occupied the rear one. January 1, 1947, Mrs. Clark rented her apartment, furnished, to people named Brewer and moved out to a place called Nine Mile Falls. Her family consists of .her husband, an old age pensioner, age sixty-nine, who does not work; two children of a prior marriage, a boy, sixteen, and a girl, fifteen; and a boy, two-and-one-half, a child of this marriage. Mrs. Clark works in Spokane and neighbors at Nine Mile, named Reilly, take care of the baby:

*851 Trouble arose'.between mother and daughter with the result that three actions were instituted: an accounting suit by the mother against the daughter; a partition suit by the daughter against the mother; and an abuse of suit by the daughter against the mother. The three cases were consolidated for trial and judgments rendered October 22, 1949. The mother recovered judgment in the accounting suit,in the amount of $2,328.72.- The daughter recovered judgment in the abuse of process suit in the amount of $50. In the partition suit, the court found the daughter and mother to be each the owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property, found that no partition thereof could be made, and ordered it sold. The court ordered certain proceeds of the sale to be applied to costs and prior liens, and ordered that the balance be divided between Mrs. Clark and Mrs. Davis.

This occurred October 22, 1949. On the same day, Mrs. Clark’s tenants, the Brewers, acknowledged receipt of a notice of termination of their tenancy and agreed to November 15th. The following day, October 23rd, Mrs. Clark and her family moved into an upstairs room over the apartment, which they occupied until the Brewers left. This was a small room which had been used for storage. The stairway opens from the kitchen of the front apartment and also from a hall between the two All that was moved from Nine Mile to this room was a bed, bedding and some boxes. Mrs. Clark owned the furniture in the Brewer apartment. Her husband did not stay there all the time, but Mrs. Brewer testified that he stayed there many nights. The baby remained at Nine Mile with the Reillys most of the time.

October 27th, Mrs. Clark filed a declaration of homestead on her interest in the house at 2727 West Cleveland. Mrs. Davis then had execution issued on her judgment against Mrs. Clark, and the sheriff advertised a sale of Mrs. Clark’s interest, which sale was restrained by the court until it could determine the rights of the parties with respect to Mrs. Clark’s declaration of homestead. This appeal, as stated, is from the trial court's adverse ruling against *852 Mrs. Clark, on its finding that she did not file her declaration of homestead in good faith.

“Homestead laws are not founded on the principles of equity, but are enacted as a matter of public policy in the interest of humanity. Their purpose is to provide a home for each citizen of the government, where his family may be sheltered and live beyond the reach of financial misfortune, and, likewise, their purpose is to encourage and provide home ownership, to inculcate in individuals those feelings of independence which are essential to the maintenance of free institutions, to protect society from the danger of citizens becoming paupers, and, in general, to promote the stability and welfare of the state. These laws are based on the theory that the preservation of the homestead is of greater importance than the payment of debts, and their purpose is to protect the family as a whole, and not merely the individual who for the time being is the head of the family. It is not their purpose, however, to enable one to escape just liabilities or to perpetrate a fraud or injustice.” 40 C.J.S. 431, Homesteads, § 2.

We find it necessary to review some of our decisions dealing with the question of good faith in filing declarations of homestead. In Schoenheider v. Tuengel, 96 Wash. 103, 164 Pac. 748, appellant, having filed a declaration, sought to enjoin a sale of the property. He claimed to be the head of a family, alleging that he had residing with him on the premises, a minor son, and an adult daughter who was unable to support herself. The testimony showed that, after a judgment had been rendered against him, he went onto the premises in question, consisting of about forty acres of raw, unimproved land, and built a small shack thereon. He and his daughter moved there, but spent most of their time in town, or visiting in the east. At the time of the trial, no clearing or improvement of any kind had been done on the land. In affirming a judgment dismissing the action, this court said:

“The facts to which we have referred, in the light of the details gathered. from careful examination of the record, convince us that appellant never intended in good faith to occupy the land as a home for himself and his son. His pretended residence was merely colorable, and the filing of *853 the declaration of homestead was not for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a home, but was solely for the purpose of defeating his creditors.
“ ‘If the intention of the debtor when he occupies land as a homestead is not only to make it his present home, but also to prevent creditors from collecting their debts by subjecting the property thereto, the exemption may nevertheless be secured; but in the absence of good faith upon the debtor’s part in respect to occupancy of the property no homestead can be obtained by him.’ 21 Cyc. 471.
“The idea of home is the very foundation rock upon which all homestead laws are based, and unless it is the honest intention of the declarant to actually occupy the premises as a home, he is not within the protection of the statute. We are not unmindful of the rule that statutes of this character are not in derogation of the common law, but are to be liberally construed to the end that the wise and benevolent policy which prompted their enactment may be carried into effect. At the same time, it is equally the duty of the courts not to permit these humane laws to be prostituted and perverted to the' purpose of enabling an unscrupulous debtor to avoid the payment of his honest obligations by resorting to their provisions as a mere subterfuge with no honest intention or purpose of occupying the land as a home.”

In Canadian Bank of Commerce v. Kellough, 142 Wash. 335, 253 Pac. 124, there had been distributed to Kellough and his sister, each an undivided one-half interest in a tract of land and the residence thereon. The property had been rented to one Dr. Denny. Without an attempt to terminate the tenancy, Kellough, by subterfuge, gained admission to the upstairs of the house, which was not being used by the tenant. He brought his family and a few household necessaries.

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Bluebook (online)
226 P.2d 904, 37 Wash. 2d 850, 1951 Wash. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-davis-wash-1951.