Gaylord v. Place

33 P. 484, 98 Cal. 472, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 946
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1893
Docket1806
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 P. 484 (Gaylord v. Place) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaylord v. Place, 33 P. 484, 98 Cal. 472, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 946 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Belcher, C.

On September 24,1891, the defendants were husband and wife and were residing on a tract of land in Nevada County. On that day the husband, Henry M. Place, executed in proper form and caused to be recorded a declaration of homestead on the said land, in which he stated that he estimated the actual cash value of the property to be fifteen hundred dollars.

On October 10, 1891, Place filed in the superior court of Nevada County his petition in insolvency, properly verified and stating the necessary facts, and having annexed thereto the schedule and inventory required in such eases; and thereupon an order was made by the court adjudging the petitioner to be an insolvent debtor, and fixing November 16,1891, as the time for the creditors of the debtor to meet and prove their- debts and choose an assignee of his estate. A copy of this order was duly published and served by mail on all the creditors named in the schedule.

On October 26, 1891, the insolvent presented to the court and filed his petition, asking that the premises described in his declaration of homestead be set apart for his use and benefit as a homestead, and thereupon the court, on the same day and without any notice being given to creditors, made and entered an order as prayed for.

On the day appointed for that purpose the creditors met and [475]*475elected the plaintiff assignee of the insolvent’s estate, and within five days thereafter he duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such; and the clerk of the court then by an instrument, under his hand and seal of the court, assigned and conveyed to him all the estate, real and personal, of the debtor, not exempt by law from execution.

On January 5, 1892, the plaintiff commenced this action, alleging, among other things, in substance, that the prem'ses set apart as a homestead to the defendant, Henry M. Place, were at the time his declaration of homestead was filed thereon public mineral lands of the United States, which had been located by him as a placer mining claim, and had been used solely for mining purposes; that the said premises were of a Value of not less than three thousand dollars, and that no portion thereof was, or ever had been, exempt by law from execution, or from the operation of proceedings in insolvency, or subject to be selected or set apart as a homestead; that by virtue of the election and appointment of plaintiff as assignee, and the assignment and conveyance made to him as such assignee, he became and then was the sole and exclusive owner, and entitled to the possession of all of said premises; and the prayer was that it be adjudged and decreed that the said premises were not impressed with a homestead character; that plaintiff, as assignee of the estate of the insolvent, was the sole and exclusive owner thereof; and that neither of the defendants had any interest in or right of possession to any portion thereof.

The answer of defendants denied that the premises described in the complaint were valuable solely for placer mining purposes, or had been solely used by them as a mining claim; denied that no portion of the said premises was or had ever been exempt by law from execution, or not subject to be selected or set aside as a homestead; denied that the plaintiff, as assignee, ever became or was the sole or exclusive owner or entitled to the possession of that part of said premises described in the declaration of homestead set forth; and also denied that the claim of defendants or either of them was without right. It then alleged that defendants were husband and wife, and that for many years prior to September 24, 1891, they actually resided upon and used the land described in the declaration of [476]*476homestead, with the dwelling-house thereon, as their permanent home; that up to the said date the said premises were largely-used by the husband for the purpose of earning a living by the process of hydraulic mining, but that the said operations were so impeded by injunctions and other legal process as to prevent him from properly working the ground, and that at the time the declaration of homestead was recorded» the premises were of little value for any purpose, but remained the permanent residence and home of the defendants. It then sets forth the declaration of homestead and the filing thereof, the proceedings in insolvency, and the order of the court setting apart the homestead as before stated, and alleges that the said order was duly given and made and is still in full force and effect, and that the court had jurisdiction to make it; that the plaintiff and those whom he represents were parties defendant to the insolvency proceedings, and that plaintiff is estopped from questioning the validity of the order so setting apart the homestead, and that defendants plead the same as a bar to the suit.

The case was tried, and the court found, among other things, that the premises in controversy were public mineral land of the United States, held by the defendant, Henry M. Place, by virtue of locations thereof as placer mining claims, and that they were chiefly valuable as a mining claim, and had been used by defendants as their sole means of support, chiefly by carrying on the business of gold mining thereon-; “that on the twenty-fourth day of September, 1891, and for many years prior thereto, the defendants, Henry M. Place and his wife, actually resided upon and occupied the dwelling-house and premises described in the declaration of homestead, occupying and using the same as their home and residence.....but said occupati m was for the carrying on mining on said premises and the land adjoining, the use of the homestead premises for grazing or agriculture being secondary and merely incidental to the said occupation of mining; that said defendants had no other home or residence save the one described in their homestead declaration; that on and up to the time when the declaration of homestead was filed, all the premises described therein were used by the defendants for the additional purpose of grazing their horses and cattle, and a small portion thereof fora vegetable garden”; [477]*477that the order setting apart the premises as a homestead “ was still in full force and effect at the date of the commencement of and at the date of the trial of this action, and that in making said order this court had jurisdiction so to do, and that the plaintiff and those whom he now represents were parties defendant to said insolvency proceedings, but that said order was made ex parte and without notice of any kind, and inadvertently and improvidently made by said court, and that said plaintiff is not estopped by the said order from questioning its validity”; that the premises embraced in the said declaration of homestead are of a value of not less than three thousand dollars, and that no portion thereof is, or ever, at any time, has been, exempt from execution, or subject to be selected or set apart as a homestead, and that the plaintiff by virtue of his election, appointment, and qualification as assignee, and the conveyance made to him by the clerk of the court, became and is the sole owner of all the premia is” described in his complaint; that the defendants each claim some interest in the premises and property described, and refuse t> deliver possession thereof to the plaintiffj but that their “ said claim and refusal are wholly without right, and a cloud upon plaintiff’s title thereto and right of possession thereof, as such assignee.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P. 484, 98 Cal. 472, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaylord-v-place-cal-1893.