Goldsborough v. Hewitt

1909 OK 7, 99 P. 907, 23 Okla. 66, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 13, 1909
DocketNo. 2129, Okla. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 1909 OK 7 (Goldsborough v. Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldsborough v. Hewitt, 1909 OK 7, 99 P. 907, 23 Okla. 66, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 326 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

Turner, J.

(after stating the facts as above). The only assignment of error necessary for us to consider is that the judgment is not supported by the evidence and is contrary to law.

The facts are undisputed.' They are: That in March, 1896, plaintiffs were living as husband and wife on their homestead in Kingfisher county; that there were living with them their three children; that about that time the plaintiff, then Louisa Golds-borough, now Louisa Caldwell, took the youngest child and went to Kansas to secure employment; that while gone, without her knowledge, consent, or joinder, and without consideration, to wit, on February 18, 1897, her coplaintiff, then her husband, made, executed, and delivered to defendant a quitclaim deed to their said homestead, and put him in possession, which' he has since retained.

At that time the law provided (St. Okla. 1893, § 2844) :

“The following property shall be reserved to the head of every family residing in the territory exempt from attachment or execution, and every other species of forced sale for the payment of debts, except as hereinafter provided: First, the homestead of the family.”

*69 Section 1627:

“All instruments conveying or affecting the title to the homestead exempted by law to the head of a family, shall be'void unless the husband and wife sign and acknowledge one and the same joint instrument conveying the same.”

This conveyance was therefore void. Hall v. Powell et ux. 8 Okla. 276, 57 Pac. 168; Moore v. Daniel Reaves et al., 15 Kan. 150; Matthew Chambers and Wife v. Robert H. Cox, 23 Kan, 393; C. M. Ott v. Amy Sprague, 27 Kan. 620; W. R. Hill et al. v. Chas. Alexander et al., 2 Kan. App. 251, 41 Pac. 1066; Mary M. Locke v. Margaret Redmond, 6 Kan. App. 76, 49 Pac. 670; Schermerhorn v. Mahaffie, 34 Kan. 108, 8 Pac. 199.

In Chambers and Wife v. Cox, supra, Brewer, J., speaking for the court, said:

“The separate deed of a married man to the homestead is void; it does not divest him of title, nor estop him from recovering the land. The question is not, who will inherit from him? but, has his title been divested? And the Constitution says that his title to the homestead shall not pass unless his wife joins in the deed. While the Legislature may regulate the matter of inheritance, it cannot avoid or limit the constitutional provision, for the protection of homesteads. The Constitution forbids the alienation without the joint consent of husband and wife. It does not add, ‘providing they are living together and occupying the homestead/ nor, ‘providing that both are residents of the state’: but the prohibition against separate alienation is absolute, when the relation of husband and wife exists.”

This would seem to be conclusive of the question, and would be were it not contended in support of the judgment that Louisa Caldwell, being divorced from William H. Goldsborough, has no interest in the subject-matter of this suit, and the alleged rights of William II. Goldsborough to the land in controversy have heretofore been decided by the court adversely to him in the case of William H. Goldsborough v. Eobert - Hewitt, and are, therefore, res adjudicada.

We think the first point well taken. The undisputed facts are, in addition to those already stated, that after making the *70 deed to defendant, and while his wife was gone, as stated, Nil! iam H. Goldsborongh brought suit for divorce against her by pitblication, on July IS, 1897, and obtained a decree, October 30, 1897, while she was still absent from the territory. At the time of the rendition of that decree, the chancellor, undoubtedly, had the right, under Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. St. Okla. 1893, § 4839, to set aside the homestead to either plaintiff or defendant; but the decree being silent on the subject, we are constrained to hold that she retained no right therein, but that the same remained in the husband. In Brandon v. Brandon, 14 Kan. 342. Brewer, J., in speaking of the power of the chancellor in the premises, under Laws 1870, p. 180, e. 87, § 27, which confers power similar to those conferred by section 4839, supra, said:

“In so far as it is a homestead, it is the homestead of each, and upon a divorce the court has the power to assign it to either. The statute expressly gives the court the power in case of a divorce, whether granted for the fault of the wife, or the husband, to give to her such share of her husband’s real or personal estate as shall be just and reasonable.”

See, also, Blakenship v. Blakenship, 19 Kan. 159.

That she retained no right to the homestead is by reason of the fact that the statute expressly reserves it to the head of the family, which was William IT. Goldsborough. By the decree she ceased to be a member of the family the same as if dead, and thereby lost all claim upon or right to it as a homestead. A citation of authority would seem unnecessary in support of this position, but it has a number of times been so expressly held.

In Burns v. Lewis, 86 Ga. 591, 13 S. E. 123, the court said:

“That the dissolution of the marriage severed Mrs. Lewis from the family, and she was no longer a beneficiary of the homestead. But by the Constitution of 1868, her husband, as the head of a family, had the right to a homestead, of which the sole beneficiaries were the members of his family. Code 1873, § 5135. * * * A total divorce severs the wife from the family as effectually as death itself. She ceases to be a beneficiary of the homestead provision, and her relation to it thenceforth is the same as if she had never been a member of the family. The pro *71 vision which the law contemplates for a divorced wife is alimony, or such an interest in the property as' the jury rendering the final verdict shall award to her. In this instance, the jury thought proper to declare in express terms that no alimony was to be set apart for her support. We have already seen that the eifeet of this was to leave the title to the property now in question in Lewis. If her interest in it as a homestead was destroyed try the dissolution of the marriage, and the verdict conferred upon her no new interest, she was left altogether without right to use or occupy the premises, and consequently, when Lewis brought his action against her in 1874, both title and the right of possession were in him.”

In Julius Rosholt v. Thea Mehus, 3 N. D. 513, 57 N. W. 783, 23 L. R. A. 239, numerous authorities are cited in support of this position. In that case, section 2 of the syllabus reads:

“In divorce proceedings, it is competent for the court to assign the homestead to the innocent party, either absolutely or for a limited period; but where the decree in the divorce procedings is silent upon the question, the homestead will, upon the dissolution of the marriage, remain in possession of the party holding the legal title thereto, discharged of all homestead rights or claims' of the other party.”

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Bluebook (online)
1909 OK 7, 99 P. 907, 23 Okla. 66, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldsborough-v-hewitt-okla-1909.