Estate of Walley

11 Nev. 260
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1876
DocketNo. 774
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 11 Nev. 260 (Estate of Walley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Walley, 11 Nev. 260 (Neb. 1876).

Opinions

By the Court,

Beatty, J.:

This is an appeal from an order denying the petition of appellant to have a homestead set apart for her use and declared not subject to administration. The material facts disclosed by the statement on appeal are as follows: Petitioner and deceased were married prior to the year 1863. During that year they commenced residing on the premises now claiirted as a homestead, and resided there continuously until the death of the husband in 1875. No declaration of homestead was ever made or filed by them, or either of them, although all the facts existed which would have entitled either of them to do so at any time subsequent to the passage of the homestead act of March 6, 1865, and prior to the death of the husband.

In December, 1872, being desirous of raising money on a mortgage of the premises, the petitioner and her husband made and filed a formal and general abandonment of all claim of homestead therein, such declaration being considered by the mortgagee necessary for his security. Notwithstanding this declaration, however, petitioner'and her husband continued, as above stated, to reside on the premises, making them their actual home. The petitioner has never had any children, and has not now any relative residing with or - dependent upon her, and the sole question to be decided is, whether, under these circumstances, she is • entitled to have the homestead set apart for her use, exenqpt from the claims of the general creditors of the estate.

Section 123 of the act to regulate the settlement of the estates of deceased persons reads as follows: “Upon the return of the inventory, or at any subsequent time during the administration, the court or the probate judge may, of [263]*263Ills own motion, or on application, set apart, for the use of the family of the deceased, all personal property which is •by law exempt from execution, and the homestead as designated by the general homestead law, or by section 126 of this act.”

The first clause of section 126 reads as follows: “If there is no law in force exempting property from execution, the -following shall be set apart for the use of the widow or minor child-or children, and shall not he subject to administration.” It then proceeds to enumerate the articles to be exempted, and among the rest the homestead, to consist of the dwelling and a limited amount of land, not exceeding five thousand dollars in value.

These two sections, construed together, and considered without reference to other provisions of the statutes and constitution, seem to have a very clear meaning. In the first place, the expression in section 123, “may set apart for the use of the family of the deceased,” must, on a familiar principle of construction, be considered as imperative and mandatory as if it had read “'shall set apart,” etc.; and in the next place it is clear, from the language of section 126, that the legislature intended to embrace within the meaning of the words “family of the deceased ” a childless widow. The property is to be set apart for the use of “the widow or minor child or children.” The effect of these provisions is therefore the same as if the wording of the statute had been as follows: The probate court or judge shall set apart for the use of the widow of any deceased person all spinning-wheels, books, etc., and the homestead. And unless they have been repealed, or superseded, or qualified by some provision of the constitution or subsequent statutes, the appellant is clearly entitled to the relief which she prays for.

It is not contended that any provision of the constitution affects the operation of this part of the probate act; but it seems to have been considered by the district judge that the homestead act of 1865 was exclusively applicable to the case, on the principle, no doubt, that being a later enactment relating to the same subject, it repettled the former by [264]*264implication. This view, if we are correct in attributing it to the district judge, was, we think, a mistake. Kepeals by implication are not favored, and are only held to have occurred in cases, of irreconcilable repugnancy between the later and the former enactment, when the two cannot stand together, (Thorpe v. Schooling, 7 Nevada, 17) and there is no such repugnancy between these two acts. Each may stand and have its full operation without coming in conflict with any provision of the other. They are entirely independent, and, in fact, contemplate different objects. Each is intended to exempt the homestead from certain liabilities; but the one, the homestead act, exempts it from liability for the debts of the owner, so long, at least, as he continues to be the head of the family, no matter at what time, after November 13, 1861, the debts may have been contracted—• whether before or after the family relation commenced, or before or after the homestead was dedicated. The other, the probate act, has a more limited, but at the same time, an independent operation. It merely exempts the homestead in favor of the widow or minor child or children of a deceased person, from the payment of the general debts contracted by him in his lifetime, and from debts accruing in the course of administration. A homestead, set apart under the probate act, simply becomes not subject to administration, that is, not subject to the claims of general creditors of the estate, but it remains subject, in the hands of the widow, to the payment of her debts, whether contracted before or after it was so set apart. To make it a homestead, -within the meaning of the homestead act, so as to be exempt from the payment of her debts, as well as those of her deceased husband, she would have to claim it under the homestead law; and, in order to do that, she would be obliged to show that she was the head of the family, which the appellant in this case has not done. It does not follow, however, that because .she cannot avail herself of the privileges of the homestead act and secure a homestead that will be exempt from liability for her own debts, that she must therefore, be denied the benefit of an act which was designed to secure to a widow, whether childless [265]*265or not, a homestead, exempt from liability for the debts of her deceased husband. It would indeed be a strange^anomaly in our laws if they really bore this construction:.,that a man and his wife, or either of them, may, at any time before his death, exempt their homestead from all liability for the debts of either, whether contracted before or after the declaration of homestead; but that, if the husband dies be-: fore such declaration is made, his widow, if she happens to be- childless, must be turned out of doors in order to pay the expenses of administration—that the very bereavement that makes the exemption of a homestead more necessary, utterly deprives her of the right. In this case, there can be no doubt that at any time before the death of David Walley, he or his wife, either, might have secured this homestead from liability for his debts by filing the declaration provided for in the homestead act. Since his death, she has lost the right to proceed under that act,'because she is “unmarried” and is not the “ head of a family,” and if her rights were not otherwise secured, it might follow that her husband’s creditors could take from her what they could not have taken from him in his lifetime. But her rights are otherwise secured. They are secured by the provisions of the probate act above quoted, which have never been repealed by implication or otherwise.

It is in section four of the homestead act (C. L.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Nev. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-walley-nev-1876.