Howell, Jewett & Co. v. McCrie

36 Kan. 636
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 36 Kan. 636 (Howell, Jewett & Co. v. McCrie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howell, Jewett & Co. v. McCrie, 36 Kan. 636 (kan 1887).

Opinion

Opinion by

Simpson, C.:

The precise question in the case is, whether the written instrument executed and acknowledged by Nannie E. Stoner, on the 27th day of December, 1881, considered in connection with the mortgage executed by her husband, Samuel A. Stoner, on the 12th day of November, 1881, fulfills the requirements of article 15, § 9 of the constitution, and amounts to and is the joint consent of husband and wife to the alienation. In this case the husband, without the knowledge or consent of the wife, executed a mortgage on the homestead, signed, or procured some one to sign, the name of the wife to the instrument creating the lien, and then fraudulently procured its acknowledgment by a notary public. Subsequently the notary, learning the facts and becoming uneasy for his OAvn safety, sought the wife at a time when the husband Avas not present, and, “explaining to her the nature of his business,” she by a Avritten instrument attempted to ratify Avhat her husband had done. Is this consent f Is it the joint consent of husband and Avife as contemplated by the constitution ?

' The homestead feature of the laws has always been regarded Avith peculiar favor by the courts of those states by which it [642]*642has been enacted. It has been the theme of both forensic and judicial eloquence. It has been repeatedly declared in legislative halls and from the bench, that the policy of these laws is “liberal” and “benevolent,” “their object a noble one”; that “they are an enlightened public policy,” and “their provisions the most beneficent.” In the convention that framed the constitution of this state there was no one subject that was more carefully considered and more thoroughly discussed than the homestead provision. At least twenty-five pages of the published debates of that body are devoted to the discussion of this subject. In the various stages and phases of that discussion, among the many opinions and comments made on the section, as it was being perfected, and as finally adopted, the following expressions are selected as guides to the intention of its authors, to wit:

“The wife’s right to the actual control of the homestead.”
“The guarantee of a home to every member of the family.”
“A reckless or drunken husband should not have power to alienate the home of his family.”
“The protection of the family, and not the head of the family merely.”
“ To give permanency and value to the homestead by making its alienation difficult.”
“To put it out of the power of the husband or the misfortunes of trade to take away the homestead.”
“A home for the family, that Shylocks cannot reach.” “The woman, the wife and mother, shall have control of the home.”
“ There is no intention to exclude the woman, for that would destroy the object of a homestead.”
“ Neither the hand of the law nor all the uncertainties of life can eject the family from the possession of it.”
“ Gives every mother and child in the state a home to which they may retire and find shelter from the storms of life.”

This is the spirit in which the homestead provision was conceived, and these are the reasons for its adoption, and it must be read in the light, and construed in the spirit, of these declaratory statements of its framers. In the earliest adjudications of this court on questions arising under this homestead [643]*643feature of our constitution, the same or similar expressions are used. In Morris v. Ward, 5 Kas. 239, Mr. Justice Valentine says:

“ The' homestead was not intended for the play and sport of capricious husbands merely, nor can it be made liable for his weaknesses or misfortunes. It was not established for the benefit of the husband alone, but for the benefit of the family and of society; to protect the family from destitution, and society from the danger of her citizens becoming paupers.”

In Helm v. Helm, 11 Kas. 19, Chief Justice Kingman says:

“The wife’s interest is an existing one. The occupation and enjoyment of the estate is secured to her against any act of her husband or of creditors without her consent. If her husband abandons her, that use remains to her and the family. With or without her husband, the law has set this property apart as her home.”

These citations are sufficient to show that both the convention that framed the constitution and the court whose prerogative it is to construe it, have unitedly declared its purposes and objects to be for “the protection and maintenance of the wife and children against the neglect and improvidence of the husband and father.”

This court, in the consideration of questions arising under this provision of the constitution and the statutory enactments in aid thereof and supplemental thereto, must give them a liberal construction, so that the purposes intended by the laws shall the better be advanced and secured. (Thomp. H. & Ex. p. 8, and authorities there cited.) These same considerations induce the courts to adopt a strict rule respecting their alienation, to the end that what is regarded so highly as to ■ be embodied in the organic law as the most beneficent legislation and the most enlightened public policy, is not to be lightly regarded and easily avoided by the parties for whose protection the legislation was adopted. Hence it is held that the homestead right can be barred only by complying strictly with the laws prescribing the mode of alienation. (Moore v. Titman, 33 Ill. 360; Kitchell v. Burgwin, 21 id. 45; Connor [644]*644v. McMurray, 84 Mass. 202; Greenough v. Turner, 77 id. 332; Hoge v. Hollister, 2 Tenn. Ch. 606; Dickinson v. McLane, 57 N. H. 31.) To divest the homestead estate, the mode of conveyance prescribed by the law governing the alienation of such estates must be strictly pursued, is the rule generally adopted in all the states, in which such laws have been enacted, held more strictly in some than in others, and yet in all there must be a literal compliance with the provisions of the statutes in this behalf.

From all the adjudications upon this subject, the three following rules are deduced, and may fairly be considered as settled:

1. The object of the homestead law is to protect the family of the owner in the possession and enjoyment of the property.

2. That construction must be given such laws, which will best advance and secure their object.

3. To divest the homestead estate, there must be a literal compliance with the mode of alienation prescribed by the statute.

mortgage without joint consent°f hushand Applying these rules to the mortgage first executed by Stoner, and subsequently to its attempted ratification by Mrs. Stoner, the conclusion is irresistible that it was not done m compliance with the provisions or x x . the homestead law, and that it was violative both of the letter and the spirit of the constitution. The requirements of the organic law in this respectare plain and unmistakable: “The homestead shall not be alienated without the joint consent of husband and wife, when that relation

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Bluebook (online)
36 Kan. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howell-jewett-co-v-mccrie-kan-1887.