Hay v. Wanner

204 F.2d 355, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2436
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 1953
Docket14134
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 F.2d 355 (Hay v. Wanner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hay v. Wanner, 204 F.2d 355, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2436 (5th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

STRUM, Circuit Judge.

The purpose of this suit is to set aside conveyances of Florida homestead lands, alleged to be in violation of plaintiffs’ rights, as heirs, under Article 10 of the Florida Constitution.

Appellants, plaintiffs below, are adult children of W. P. Hay, now deceased, and his first wife, who predeceased him. On July 12, 1938, W. P. Hay married Mary E. H. Bayly (now Hay), one of the defendants below. They resided on the lands in question until the death of W. P. Hay in January, 1947. Until the conveyances hereinafter mentioned, title to the lands stood in W. P. Hay individually.

Prior to their marriage, W. P. Hay and his second wife, Mary E. H. Bayly each owned a home. By an oral antenuptial agreement between them, they agreed to sell the Mary Bayly home and live in the W. P. Hay home, placing the Hay home, and other properties owned by them individually, in “joint ownership.” Accordingly, prior to the marriage, the Bayly home was sold, and a substantial portion of the purchase price used to repair the Hay home, the property here in question. About four months after the marriage, Mrs. Hay also terminated her individual bank account, and opened a joint account with her husband, in which she thereafter deposited other funds received by her from the sale of her home, from the sale of furniture, and from other sources.

On November 2, 1938, about four months after the marriage, W. P. Hay, joined by his wife Mary E. H. B. Hay, conveyed four of the homestead lots here in question (and other lots) to E. R. Underhill, who on the same day re-conveyed the same to “W. P. Hay and Mary E. H. B. Hay, his wife,” thus creating an estate by the entireties, under which, by the law of Florida, the surviving spouse inherits the whole estate, to the exclusion of the children. Denham v. Sexton, Fla., 48 So.2d 416. Similarly, on February 3, 1941, about two and a half years after the marriage, W. P. Hay, joined by his said wife, conveyed two other lots, one of which is here in question as a part of the homestead, to John F. Carney, who on the same day re-conveyed the same to the Hays by the entireties. These are the conveyances here under attack.

Plaintiffs contend that said conveyances are in violation of their rights as heirs under Article 10 of the Florida Constitution; that upon the death of their father title to the homestead lands descended to them, subject only to a life estate in the second wife; and that, being in violation of Art. 10 of the Florida Constitution, the conveyances should be cancelled as clouds on their title.

Defendants below contend, and the trial court held, that homestead lands in Florida may be alienated with the joint consent of husband and wife, and. where, as here, it is in good faith and upon adequate consideration, a conveyance of the homestead through a third party to the husband and wife by the entireties is good as against the children.

Article 10, section 1, of the Florida Constitution, creates in favor of the head of a family residing in that state a homestead in real and personal property which shall be exempt from the claims of creditors, and further provides that the real estate shall *357 not be alienable without the joint consent of husband and wife, when that relationship exists. By Section 2 of Article 10, it is provided that the “exemption” shall inure to the widow and heirs of the party entitled to it; and by Section 4 it is provided that nothing in Article 10 shall be construed to prevent the holder of a homestead from alienating it by deed or mortgage duly executed by husband and wife, if such relationship exists.

Section 731.05, Fla.Stat.1951, F.S.A., provides, inter alia, that when the head of a family owning a homestead dies and leaves a widow or lineal descendants or both surviving him, the homestead “shall not be the subject of devise, but shall descend as otherwise provided in this law for the descent of homesteads.”

Section 731.27, Fla.Stat.1951, F.S.A., a part of the same legislative Act, provides that “The homestead shall descend as other property; provided, however, that if the decedent be survived by a widow and lineal descendants, the widow shall take a life estate in the homestead, with vested remainder to the lineal descendants in being at the time of the death of the decedent.”

In interpreting Article 10 of the Constitution, the Supreme Court of Florida has displayed marked solicitude for the interests of children in homestead property, particularly against attempts to gratuitously cut off those rights in favor of a wife. In Byrd v. Byrd, 73 Fla. 322, 74 So. 313, and Thomas v. Craft, 55 Fla. 842, 46 So. 594, the Supreme Court of Florida held that where there is a child or children of the husband who is the head of a family, homestead real estate can not be conveyed by the husband directly to the wife, and that a deed purporting to do so is void. The reason assigned is that under Art. 10, supra, homestead exemptions “inure” to the heirs as well as to the widow, and that this interest can be alienated only as prescribed in the Constitution. It does not clearly appear in the two cases last cited whether or not there was a consideration for the conveyance, but the implications are that there was not. See also a later case, Church v. Lee, 102 Fla. 478, 136 So. 242, in which husband and wife joined in a conveyance directly to the wife, and it was held that the complaint, brought to set it aside, was not defective merely because it did not allege that the conveyance was “voluntary” or “without consideration.” Compare Semple v. Semple, 82 Fla. 138, 89 So. 638.

In other Florida cases, including Norton v. Baya, 88 Fla. 1, 102 So. 361; Jackson v. Jackson, 90 Fla. 563, 107 So. 255; Norman v. Kannon, 133 Fla. 710, 182 So. 903; Florida Nat. Bank of Jacksonville v. Winn, 158 Fla. 750, 30 So.2d 298; McEwen v. Larson, 136 Fla. 1, 185 So. 866; Bess v. Anderson, 102 Fla. 1127, 136 So. 898; and Hart v. Gulf Fertilizer Co., 91 Fla. 991, 108 So. 886, the husband and wife conveyed to a third party, who immediately re-conveyed either to the wife alone, or to the husband and wife by the entireties. These too were held to be in violation of Art. 10 and void. The reason assigned was that if the conveyances were given effect they “would operate to transfer the legal title to the homestead from the husband to the wife, stripped of its homestead status or character, thereby converting her interest therein to absolute ownership, and divesting his children, who are his prospective heirs, of the interest which under the Constitution inures to them.” In these cases, however, the conveyances were gratuitous and without consideration, their apparent purpose being to thwart the children’s interest in the homestead.

We have found no Florida case rejecting the conveyance of a homestead either directly to the wife, or through an intermediary to the husband and wife by the entireties, where there was an adequate consideration therefor, and the conveyance was bona fide and not merely a device to circumvent the children’s homestead rights. It is conceded that homestead realty may be conveyed by the husband and wife to a third party for an adequate consideration, thus terminating the children’s interests therein, and that the parents may dispose of the proceeds as they see fit. It is not necessary that the children join in such a conveyance.

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Bluebook (online)
204 F.2d 355, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hay-v-wanner-ca5-1953.