Ex Parte: Martha A. Cothran

121 S.E. 556, 128 S.C. 122, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 16, 1924
Docket11427
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 556 (Ex Parte: Martha A. Cothran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte: Martha A. Cothran, 121 S.E. 556, 128 S.C. 122, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 161 (S.C. 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

*124 The appeal raises the question: Are the widow and children of the head of a family entitled to assert and enforce the right of homestead in property devised and bequeathed to- them by the deceased husband and father under the terms of a will which directs that the testator’s debts be first paid ?

The case made is this: L. A. Cothran died July 27, 1920, leaving of force a will, executed in April, 1918, whereby he devised and bequeathed all his real estate and personal property to' his wife during her lifetime and at her death to be divided among his “bodily heirs” and upon her remarriage to be divided among his “children.” The testator’s estate consisted of some personal property and about 27% acres of land. The will contains the provision:

“It is also my desire that all my funeral expenses, doctor bills and all other just debts be paid at my death.”

The widow qualified as executrix, August, 1920, but took no other steps to settle the estate, made no other election or renunciation under the will, and continued with her children “to live on the property and use it.” On January 11, 1923, Martha A. Cothran, the widow, filed a petition with the Clerk of Court, praying that a homestead be assigned to her and her children. In actions then pending and afterwards brought judgments were recovered against Martha A. Cothran, as executrix, in favor of the banks who are the respondents here, aggregating approximately $1,663. These creditors contested the proceedings before the clerk and excepted to the. granting of the petition by the clerk and the return of the appraisers by him appointed upon the grounds that Martha A. Cothran and her children were not entitled to a homestead in the lands and personal property left by L. A. Cothran, deceased, “on account of his making a will whereby he alienated his real and personal property and-provided for the payment of his debts,” and that Martha A.- Cothran, having qualified and *125 acted as executrix of the will, was thereby precluded from claiming a homestead for herself and children.

Thereupon the Circuit Judge held and decreed as follows:

“The main question in the case is: Can a homestead be set off to'petitioner, Martha A. Cothran, and her children in the lands and personal property left by testator when he alienated his property and devised and bequeathed it unto Martha A. Cothran for life, or during widowhood, and at her death or remarriage, to his children? A widow cannot reject the provisions made for her in her husband’s will and have homestead set apart to her out of lands devised. The cases of Ex parte Bullock, 58 S. C,. 238; 36 S. E., 563. Beaty v. Richardson, 56 S. C., page 176; 34 S. E., 73; 46 L. R. A., 517, also 22 A. L. R., 512, subdivisions A and B, and cases cited, hold that she cannot so reject provisions of said will and refuse to take thereunder and have homestead set apart to her.”

Pursuant to which ruling it was ordered that the proceedings before the clerk be set aside and that the claims of the contesting creditors should be first paid before the widow and children could “take under said will.”

We are of the opinion that the case at bar is not ruled by the view of the law announced and applied by the Circuit Court, and that appellant’s exceptions, all of which in substance impute error to the Circuit Judge in so holding, must be sustained. The reasons for our conclusion may perhaps best be indicated and developed by briefly reviewing the decisions from this jurisdiction cited and relied upon by the learned Circuit Judge as authority for his position.

The case of Beaty v. Richardson, 56 S. C., 173; 34 S. E. 73; 46 L. R. A., 517, in which the opinion was written by that great jurist, Chief Justice Mclver, is unquestionably authority for the proposition that (syllabus)—

“Under the homestead laws previous to the • Constitution of 1895, a devise of land was such an alienation as would defeat homestead to the heir at law.”

*126 That ruling was expressly predicated upon the language of the statute (Rev. St. 1893, § 2130) in force prior to the 'Constitution of 1895, whereby it was “declared that no right of homestead should be allowed in any property ‘aliened or mortgaged, either before or after assignment.’ ” But that the rule, as there broadly stated, is inapplicable to a case controlled by the homestead provisions of the Constitution of 1895, is clearly pointed out in the opinion of the Court in that case. In considering whether the law as it existed prior to Constitution of 1895 was to be there applied, the Court said:

“This is important, because the law as it stood, prior to the adoption of the present Constitution, was materially different from the law as it is now declared by the Act of 1896 — 22, Stat. 190 — pursuant to the present Constitution, upon the very point upon which the present controversy turns; for by Section 2130 of Rev. Stat. of 1893, it was declared ‘that no right of homestead shall exist or be allowed in any property, real or personal, aliened or mortgaged,'’’ etc., whereas by the present law it is declared that the right of homestead, before assignment, shall not be waived or defeated, ‘except it be by deed of conveyance or mortgage/ (Italics ours.)”

That, by virtue of the material difference thus adverted to by Mr. Chief Justice Mclver, no gift or devise of property by will can defeat the right of homestead in such property, as that right is defined and safeguarded by the Constitution of 1895, becomes entirely apparent upon examining the language of that instrument, which is (Article 3, § 28) as follows:

“The General Assembly shall enact such laws as will exempt from attachment, levy and sale under any mesne or final process issued from any Court, to the head of any family residing in this State, a homestead in lands, whether held in fee or any lesser estate, to the value of one thousand dollars, or so much thereof as the property is worth *127 if its value is less than one thousand dollars, with the yearly-products thereof, and to every head of a family residing in this State, whether entitled to a homestead exemption in lands or not, personal property to the value of five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as the property is worth if its value is less than five hundred dollars. The title to the homestead to be set off and assigned shall be absolute and be forSver discharged from 'all debts of the said debtor then existing or thereafter contracted except as hereinafter provided: * * *
“Provided, further, That no waiver shall defeat the right of homestead before assignment except it be by deed of conveyance, or by mortgage, and only as against the mortgage debt,” etc.

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Related

In re Childers
526 B.R. 608 (D. South Carolina, 2015)
Dorn v. Stidham
137 S.E. 331 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 556, 128 S.C. 122, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-martha-a-cothran-sc-1924.