Dittey v. Ellifritz

8 Ohio C.C. 278
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedApril 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio C.C. 278 (Dittey v. Ellifritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dittey v. Ellifritz, 8 Ohio C.C. 278 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Clark, J.

This case comes up on error from the court of common pleas of this county. An agreed statement of facts was submitted to the court'below. Joseph Ellifritz, a resident of Hillsboro, Ohio, being heavily indebted to divers and sundry persons, both as an individual and as a member of the firm of J. S. Ellifritz & Co., woolen manufacturers, left, his home on South St., Hillsboro, early in February, 1894, on what was supposed to be in the interest of his trade. He left his family, consisting of a wife and four children, in the homestead. There were no mortgage liens on the homestead, nor had the wife encumbered it in any way. The wife has no other home[279]*279stead. Ellifritz failed to return, and it was discovered upon an examination of the books of a building association, of which he was treasurer, that he was short in his accounts a considerable sum. His whereabouts have been unknown since about February 17, 1894, and. the facts developed indicated he had absconded to evade his creditors, or perhaps escape a criminal prosecution. Certain creditors holding notes upon J. S. Ellifritz, with warrants of attorney attached, after waiting a reasonable time, took judgments against him without process, and levied upon in-lot 399, in Hillsboro, being the lot upon which was the residence and which was then occupied by his family. Mrs. Elizabeth Ellifritz, the wife, filed a demand in writing upon the sheriff for the assignment of a homestead. The property being indivisible so that a homestead could not be set off by metes and bounds, the sheriff and appraisers acted under sec. 5439, Revised Statutes, and put a rental value under said statute, upon said property, and so reported. To set aside said assignment of homestead and report of appraisers, R. M. Dittey, as receiver of The Citizens’ National Bank, filed his motion in the court below, on the grounds,' that J. S. Ellifritz was not a resident of the state of Ohio, and that he had abandoned the state and his homestead, and that he and his wife were not living together.” The court below overruled said motion to set aside the assignment of the homestead, as made by the sheriff and appraisers to the wife upon her demand, to which an exception was noted. To reverse this finding of the common pleas, R. M. Dittey, receiver as aforesaid, prosecutes error to this court, and upon the agreed statement of facts, the questions of law arise.

The homestead exemption is intended for the benefit of the wife or family, as the case may be. In construing the statute, its spirit and intent must be considered. The question in the case at bar, is whether our present statute, by its peculiar wording, puts it in the power of the husband to deprive his wife of her right to a home by absenting himself on account of his debts. As against ordinary judgment liens, the statute [280]*280provides that in case of the refusal or failure of the husband to demand a homestead, the wife shall have the right to make the demand therefor, but neither can make such demand if the other has a homestead.” This last clause shows that it was the intent of the law to provide a home. Does the law permit a husband by acts of his to which she is not a party, to deprive her of this home, without providing another place of abode to which she may remove ?

The case in Cincinnati Law Bulletin, Lugauer v. Weisberger et' al., volume 13, page 637, was where a husband and wife were not living together, but apart under a judicial decree, by which she had been awarded alimony and the custody of a minor child. In that ease her claim for allowance of homestead was properly rejected, the court saying :• To hold that a wife living apart from her husband under a judicial decree allowing her alimony, is entitled to the allowance, would, in our judgment, be doing violence to both the letter and spirit of the statute.” In that case, the wife's own act worked as a bar to her claim, but clearly, so long as there has been no judicial separation of man and wife, no agreement to separate, no removal to a new abode, and the wife remains in the old home with her family, the mere absence of her husband, for whatever cause, cannot deprive her of the right to a homestead. That would be contrary to both the letter and the spirit of the law.

The husband is the head of the family and may choose the place of living, and the wife must conform thereto. Rev. Stat., sec. 3109.

The only home ever selected is the one now under levy. Whenever Joseph Ellifritz chooses a new abode or place of living for his wife, and requests her removal thereto, a new question would arise that does not appear in this case. The wife has not abandoned her husband, or failed in any of her duties or obligations under the laws of Ohio. No absence, fraud, collusion, or any other act of her husband, without her concurrence, can deprive her of this homestead.

[281]*281In McComb v. Thompson, 42 Ohio St., p. 139, the court pass on this statute. Judge Follett, says, page 145 : “As between debtor and creditor, the law makes humane provisions, not so much for the debtor himself, as for the benefit of his family, the wife and the children.”

On pages 146 and 147, the court says : “ Thus our laws regard a homestead as a personal privilege which the husband may fail or refuse to claim, when the wife shall have the right to make the demand, but she may or may not exercise the right.”

The following cases are cited: Conley v. Chilcote, 25 Ohio St. 324; Butt v. Green, 29 Ohio St. 667; Chilcote v. Conley, 36 Ohio St. 547; Carpenter v. Warren, 38 Ohio St. 416. See also, Sears et al. v. Hanks et al., 14 Ohio St. 298, 300, 301.

Mark the words, “the wife has the right.” No act of the husband can deprive her of this right, except by his own demand of the homestead. No creditor can deprive her of it. She may or may not exercise it. In the case at bar, Mrs. Ellifritz has exercised her right, and did so promptly and in writing.

The absence of Joseph S. Ellifritz is admitted, and under the laws of Ohio, he is the head of the family and may choose a new homestead without the consent of his wife, but “ Even where this is the law, the desertion by a husband of his family, leaving them in the occupancy of the old homestead is not an abandonment of that homestead.” Freeman on Executions, vol. 1, sec. 248. . “The presumption is that he continues a wanderer without a home until he returns to his duties and his family.” Freeman on Executions, vol. 1, sec. 248. The following cases are cited in foot-note 2 to that section: Moore v. Dunning, 29 Ill. 130; 81 Am. Decisions, 301; Cary v. Tice, 6 Cal. 625; White v. Clark, 36 Ill. 285; Blandly v. Asher, 72 Mo. 35; Locke v. Rowell, 47 N. H. 46.

“ The abandonment of the homestead by a husband cannot prejudice the claim of his wife, where she retains possession.” Freeman on Executions, vol. 1, sec. 248. As long as the [282]*282other members of the family continue in the occupancy of the homestead, no abandonment can be presumed from the absence of the husband.

If these propositions are true, J. S. Ellifritz and his wife, in the purview of the law and according to its intent and spirit, were at the time of said demand and assignment, living .together, although in bodily presence J.

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Related

Cary v. Tice
6 Cal. 625 (California Supreme Court, 1856)
Butt v. Green
29 Ohio St. 667 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)
Moore v. Dunning
29 Ill. 130 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1862)
White v. Clark
36 Ill. 285 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1865)
Blandy v. Asher
72 Mo. 27 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio C.C. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dittey-v-ellifritz-ohiocirct-1894.