Cowdery v. Herring

143 So. 433, 106 Fla. 567
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedAugust 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 143 So. 433 (Cowdery v. Herring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowdery v. Herring, 143 So. 433, 106 Fla. 567 (Fla. 1932).

Opinions

Davis, J.

In this case it was shown that the appellant, Florence V. Cowdery, was a widow; that she resided on certain property in the city of Lakeland, as her homestead; that she was the head of a family consisting o'f a daughter *568 who lived with her; that the property on which they resided had been the family homestead for over forty years; that the only means of support Mrs. Cowdery had at the time of the institution of the litigation in the court below, was revenue derived from renting out certain parts of the homestead property comprising certain buildings she had erected thereon; that the portion of the homestead property rented out consisted of a certain commercial garage and storage building which had been erected on the homestead land, which was located in the city of Lakeland and less than one-half acre in area; that there was also another smaller building in a corner of the homestead lot from which Mrs. Cowdery received rents; that neither the garage nor the smaller building had ever been personally used by Mrs. Cowdery as a part of her own business or residence, unless renting the same and using the rents as a means of livelihood might be so construed; and that Mrs. Cowdery, in order to' defeat a judgment obtained against her by the appellee, had conveyed all of her real property including her homestead, to her two adult daughters, Florence Louise Cowdery, a single woman, and Evelyn Cowdery Murphy, a married woman.

The Chancellor in his final decree found that all of Lot “E” and the South 32 feet of Lot “D” o'f Block 17, of Munn’s Survey of Lakeland, was the homestead property of the defendant, Florence Y. Cowdery, a widow, and that she was entitled to a homestead exemption therein, being the head of a family residing in this State.

But the Court further found that there had been erected on the northwest corner of the property a two-story garage building, which had been customarily rented out by Mrs. Cowdery, ever since its construction, and that it had never been used as her own personal business place or residence, and likewise found that there had been for many years on the southwest corner of lot E aforesaid, a small oiie-story *569 structure, which had in the past been rented to the public by the defendant, as a paint shop, and that it was not in anywise being used by the defendant as part of her residence or business house.

Holding that the land occupied by the two structures last mentioned had been dedicated by the homestead claimant for business purposes, not consistent with the constitutional exemption privilege, the Court declared subject to execution and sale, that part of the homestead property upon which was located the said garage and the said paint shop. A diagram showing the respective locations of each of these structures, as deduced from the record, would be as follows :

The evidence shows that the entire tract of land originally became homestead property in 1890 and had been Mrs. Cowdery’s permanent home since that time; that the business structures found by the court to constitute a “dedication” to business uses which destroyed the homestead character, were of apparently recent construction prior to the *570 suit brought to subject them to appellee’s judgment and execution. The garage was constructed of brick, two-story, with two entrances. It was used for storage and as a repair shop. The paint shop was a corrugated one-story frame building, which Mrs. Cowdery testified had been originally built as a private garage for her home.

Section 1 of Article X of the Constitution provides that: “. . . The exemptions herein provided for in a city or town shall not extend to more improvements or buildings than the residence and business house of the owner. ’ ’

and in the case of Smith v. Guckenheimer, 42 Fla. 1, 27 Sou. Rep. 900, it was said of this provision that:

“When a homesteader placed upon the exempt half acre improvements or buildings detached from and other than the residence and business house, or when improvements are so placed that they constitute separate improvements from the residence or business house, they together with the lands supporting them, become subject to execution and sale.”

It was also held in Jordan v. Jordan, 100 Fla. 1586, 132 Sou. Rep. 466, that:

“Only such buildings upon the urban homestead as constitute the actual residence and business house of the owner are impressed with the exemption provided by the Constitution. It is withheld from other buildings or other improvements which do not constitute the residence and business house.”

So the question to be decided in this case with reference to the claim of exemption to the garage and paint shop, hereinbefore referred to, is whether or not such structures constitute “more improvements or buildings than the residence and business house of the owner.” “Mrs. Cowdery.”

Stated another way, the question is: “Where the owner of property is a widow, without trade or professio'n or other means of support, and is residing on urban property which would otherwise be her constitutional homestead in *571 its entirety, does the renting out per se of certain portions of her homestead property, consisting of a garage and separate structure used as a paint shop by the renter, for the purpose of using the rents as a means of livelihood and support for the homestead owner, cause the rented portions and the lands upon which the rented structures stand, to lose their identity and character as exempt homestead property under the provisions of the Constitution and the adjudicated eases to which we have heretofore made reference ? ’ ’

In Hill v. First National Bank of Marianna, 75 Fla. 391 84 Sou. Rep. 190 it was held that the homestead right under the constitution is not limited to a mere holding of the legal title to the exempt property from forced sale but that it is contemplated that there shall be a beneficial, peaceful and uninterrupted use and enjoyment of such property, the policy of the law being to preserve the home for the family and to protect the family from destitution and wa/nt.

Neither the brick garage, nor the corrugated frame structure used as a paint shop, while shown to be improvements on urban homestead property, were shown by the evidence to have been so placed, under the circumstances of this case, that they per se constituted separate improvements on the homestead from the owner’s residence and business house.

The term “business house” is not defined in the Constitution relating to urban homestead exemptions, but it is plain that the intendment is to preserve as exempt, a reasonable portion of the homestead improvements, in addition to the owner’s actual residence, when it appears that the improvements concerned are being used as a means of making the dinner’s livelihood.

Here the garage and paint shop in effect constitute a portion of the widowed homesteader’s “business house” *572

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 433, 106 Fla. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowdery-v-herring-fla-1932.