Horton v. Horton

48 So. 2d 850, 210 Miss. 116, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 328
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1950
Docket37675
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 48 So. 2d 850 (Horton v. Horton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Horton, 48 So. 2d 850, 210 Miss. 116, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 328 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

*121 McGehee, G. J.

The sole, issue presented by this appeal is whether or not the appellees, S. O. Horton and others, who are three of the children of W. E. Horton, deceased, are entitled, as against his widow, Mrs. Minnie Horton, and the remaining five children, to have a tract of land consisting of 113% acres sold during her widowhood for a partition of the proceeds where the same is not contiguous to a forty-acre tract on which the decedent had built his residence and resided until his death, and where his widow and some of the children have continued to reside, and where both tracts have been used as one farming unit consisting of less than 160 acres.

The facts bearing on this issue, and which are practically undisputed, if not expressly admitted, are that in December 1925 W. E. Horton purchased forty acres of cut-over and unimproved land from the Turner-Farber Love Lumber Company in Washington County, described *122 in the bill of complaint. He immediately took possession, began to clear the land and erected a dwelling house thereon for a place of residence with his family, and also erected a house thereon for a tenant. He and his family moved into the dwelling house and thereafter occupied the same as their place of residence, and his outhouses were located on this tract. He farmed the land, raising crops annually thereon, both by his own labor and that of his children and the tenant sharecropper. Approximately-three years later he purchased from the same grantor the additional tract of 113% acres which is involved in this partition proceeding, and which is located three-fourths of a mile to the south of the forty on which he resided.

The “lower” tract of land thus subsequently purchased was also cut-over lands except for twenty or twenty-five acres which were open, and on which there was a tenant house. The eastern portion of the land between the two tracts was owned by a brother of the said W. R. Horton and the western portion by other persons. They had likewise purchased their lands from the said TurnerFarber Love Lumber Company, and when W. R. Horton purchased the 113% acres it was the nearest'farm land then available for use in connection with the forty-acre tract that he was then farming, and on which he had his place of residence. He did not then own, and neither did he nor his widow thereafter acquire any land in addition to the 153% acres.

~W. R. Horton died intestate during the year 1932 while residing on the forty-acre tract and using the other tract in connection therewith as one farm, in the manner hereinafter stated, and the same has continued to be occupied and so used by his widow since that time. If both tracts of the land constituted the homestead of W. R. Horton at the time of his death, then it is not subject to partition or sale for the reason that Mrs. Minnie Horton, as his widow, is conceded to be entitled in such event to the possession and use of the land for homestead purposes *123 during her widowhood so long as she occupies or uses the same, the entire area being less than 160 acres.

The proof discloses without dispute that the forty acres first purchased by Horton, although almost all of it had been placed in cultivation, was insufficient on which to earn an adequate livelihood for his growing family in carrying on a farming operation for that purpose, which was his sole vocation as a rural resident; that he purchased the additional tract so as to extend his farming operation and be able to support his family and educate his eight children; that he personally farmed, with the help of his children, some of the forty-acre tract and a part of the other tract; that the tenant who was on the forty-acre tract farmed a part thereof and also some land on the other tract; that after purchasing the other tract he cleared additional land thereon and built another tenant house, and that the two tenant sharecroppers residing on this tract were furnished mules, farm implements, etc. which were used interchangeably on both tracts of land; that the landlord’s portion of the feed crops grown on the lower tract were stored in the barn on the upper or forty-acre tract; that firewood was hauled from the lower tract as needed for use in connection with the residence on the upper tract; and that in fact the two tracts were utilized as one farming unit the same as if they had been contiguous. Only in a physical way were the two parcels of land disconnected: by every other test they were as one, as contended in the brief of appellants.

The trial court based its decision, in holding that the “lower” tract did not constitute a part of the homestead, on the ground that the upper tract alone was worth more than the $3,000' limitation in value allowed for a homestead. But this Court held in the cases of Moody v. Moody, 86 Miss. 323, 38 So. 322, and Dickerson v. Leslie, 94 Miss. 627, 47 So. 659, 660, that the question of value has no place in the consideration of the rights of the surviving widow to the use and occupancy of the homestead; that the beneficent public policy which the *124 law was designed to establish in this regard must be liberally construed, in order to completely effectuate the legislative purpose; that the value of the homestead is not material in passing on the rights of the surviving widow, since it was never the intention of the Legislature that the “one hundred and sixty acres of land should be reduced in quantity, save in one instance, and that is where the rights of creditors were involved. ’ ’

In the case of Dickerson v. Leslie, supra, the Court declared that: “No .higher claim under the law can be propounded than the right of the widow to claim her homestead rights. No statute ever passed has a greater claim upon the court for liberal construction than this. ’ ’ There are no rights of creditors involved in the instant case, and it seems clear that from the homestead statutes hereinafter discussed and the language above quoted, it was the legislative intent that a rural homesteader should ordinarily be entitled to as much as 160 acres for homestead purposes if such an amount of his land is so located as to be truly susceptible of being devoted to homestead purposes as a unit, and without giving the homestead laws an unreasonable application for the protection of the homesteader in that behalf.

The statutes dealing with the subject of homesteads are: Sections 317, 319, 320, 322 and 478, Code of 1942. Section 317 provides that the quantity of land to which one is entitled as a homestead “shall not exceed one hundred and sixty acres, nor the value thereof, inclusive of improvements, save as hereinafter provided, the sum of three thousand ($3,000.00) dollars”. Section 319 provides how a homestead may be selected. Section 320 provides that such declaration of selection, when filed for record, shall constitute notice to all persons, etc. Section 322 provides that where no selection is made, or where there has been an improper selection, the tract of land shall be “in the form of, first, a square, or second, a parallelogram, if practicable, and composed, if practicable, of contiguous parcels, and including the *125

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Michael Vaughn Hoskins Harris
S.D. Mississippi, 2019
Carpenter v. First State Bank (In re Carpenter)
278 B.R. 102 (N.D. Mississippi, 2002)
In re Osborne
120 B.R. 64 (N.D. Mississippi, 1990)
Williamson v. Williamson
844 F.2d 1166 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)
Stinson v. Williamson (In re Williamson)
844 F.2d 1166 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)
Shows v. Watkins
485 So. 2d 288 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1986)
Stockett v. Stockett
337 So. 2d 1237 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1976)
Hendry v. Hendry
300 So. 2d 147 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1974)
Beard v. Stanley
67 So. 2d 263 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1953)
Daily v. City of Gulfport
54 So. 2d 485 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 So. 2d 850, 210 Miss. 116, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-horton-miss-1950.