In Re Foley

97 F. Supp. 843, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4392
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedJune 13, 1951
DocketB-3-51
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 F. Supp. 843 (In Re Foley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Foley, 97 F. Supp. 843, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4392 (D. Neb. 1951).

Opinion

DONOHOE, Chief Judge.

The bankrupt; Joseph L. Foley, has filed a petition for review of an order entered by the Referee which in substance disallows a homestead exemption claimed by the bankrupt. With one specific exception hereinafter discussed, the Referee’s findings of fact are accepted by this Court because they are not clearly erroneous. General Order 47, 11 U.S.C.A., following section 53. Cf. Rasmussen v. Gresly, 8 Cir., 1935, 77 F.2d 252.

In the latter part of August, 1950, the bankrupt sold a home which he owned and occupied with his family as their dwelling place. Within six months after the sale of this home he purchased, with a part of the proceeds of the sale, a glider house trailer on a conditional sales contract. The house trailer has a value of $3,900, and there is a balance of $1,000 still due under the conditional sales contract. At the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed, and at the present time, the glider house trailer was, and is, located upon land owned and operated by the Garden Valley Trailer Court. The bankrupt keeps the trailer house at this court under an oral month to- month lease for the space there occupied. It is undisputed that the bankrupt and his family did, at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, and do at the present time, occupy this trailer house as their home.

Section 40-101, R.S.Neb.1943, relating to the ' homestead exemption, provides: “A homestead not exceeding in value two-thousand dollars, consisting of the dwelling house in which the claimant resides, and its appurtenances, and the land on which the same is situated, no-t exceeding one hundred and sixty acres of land, to be selected by the owner thereof, and not in any incorporated city or village, or instead thereof, at the option of the claimant, a quantity of contiguous land not exceeding two lots within any incorporated city or village, shall be exempt from judgment liens, and from execution or forced sale, except as provided in sections 40-101 to 40-117.”

Under this statute, it has been said, that three conditions must be met before the claimant will be entitled to an exemption. Loosely stated, these conditions are: 1) the claimant must be the head of the family; 2) the owner of real estate concerning which exemption is claimed; and 3) occupy the same as a family residence. See Foster, The Nebraska Homestead, 3 Nebr.L.B. 109. The first and third requirements have been met because the bankrupt is the head of a family and with his family occupies the trailer house as a family residence. The issues in this case, both factual and legal, involve the application of the second requirement. This requirement has probably not been stated with the degree of precision necessary to emphasize the intricacies of the case. Oversimplification clouds that which should be clear. Closer analysis of this requirement discloses that two very basic problems are inextricably entwined within its scope. These are: 1) the property interest required to support a homestead exemption; and 2) the type of -prop^ erty which may be a homestead.

1. Asa general rule, in accordance with the view that a homestead right is not an estate in land but a mere privilege ot *845 exemption from execution of such estate as the holder has, it has been held that a debtor need not be the absolute owner in fee in order to establish a homestead right in land, but that any interest in land, coupled with the requisite occupancy by the debtor and his family, is sufficient to support a homestead exemption. Annotation, 89 A.L.R. 511, cases cited at 512. In the early case of Giles v. Miller, 1893, 36 Neb. 346, 54 N.W. 551, 552, 38 Am.St.Rep. 730, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled that a homestead may be claimed in lands held in joint tenancy, announcing: “We know that the purpose of the legislature in enacting the statute under consideration was to protect the debtor and his family in a home from forced sale on execution or attachment. Keeping this object in view, and applying the liberal rule of construction which always obtains in the interpretation of exemption laws, we are constrained to hold that any estate or interest in lands which gives the right of occupancy or possession is sufficient, if coupled with requisite occupancy, to entitle the person to the benefits of the provisions of the section above quoted.”

This dicta indicates that it is the beneficent object of the statute to protect the temporary interests of the leaseholder. See Foster, The Nebraska Homestead, supra. The language itself seems broad enough to include the interest of a tenant at will since a tenant at will has not only possession but a right to possession. Cf. I Tiffany, Real Property (3rd Ed.) Chap. 5, Sec. 155, p. 249; Annotation 89 A.L.R. 511, cases cited at 558. However, the Nebraska Supreme Court has held that a tenant at will does not have a sufficient interest in the property to claim a homestead exemption. Howard v. Raymers, 64 Neb. 213, 89 N.W. 1004; Rank v. Garvey, 66 Neb. 767, 92 N.W. 1025, 99 N.W. 666. From these cases, counsel for the creditor argues that the bankrupt in the present case is not entitled to a homestead exemption. The Court is not able to accept his contention because the bankrupt in this case is not technically a tenant at will. He is a tenant from month to month. While in some states a tenant from month to month has been referred to as a tenant at will, Holmes v. Wood, 88 Mich. 435, 50 N.W. 323; Prendergast v. Searle, 74 Minn. 333, 77 N.W. 231, nevertheless, a tenancy from month to month is, strictly speaking, a periodic tenancy, and the tenant has an absolute right to possession for a definite, though relatively short, period of time. A tenant at will has no assignable interest in property; but the Court is not convinced that a tenant from month to month has none. A tenancy from month to month is analogous to a tenancy from year to year (1 Tiffany, Real Property, Chap. 5, Sec. 170, p. 270) and it has been held that the interest of a tenant from year to year may be transferred without affecting the existence of the tenancy. See Cody v. Quarterman, 12 Ga. 386 (semble); Jackson ex dem. Bartholomew v. Hughes, 1 Blackf., Ind., 421; Austin v. Thomson, 45 N.H. 113; and other cases cited in 1 Tiffany, Real Property, Chap. 5, Sec. 171, p. 272, note 36. In view of the statement in Giles v. Miller, supra, as reiterated in Fisher v. Kellogg, 1935, 128 Neb. 248, 258 N.W. 404, that any estate or interest in lands which gives the right of occupancy or possession is sufficient to entitle a person to benefits of the homestead provisions, the Court is constrained to hold that the bankrupt, a tenant from month to month, has a sufficient interest in the property to support his claim for a homestead exemption. Cf. In re Wineland, D.C.Okl. 1933, 3 F.Supp. 796.

2. Having determined that the bankrupt has a sufficient possessory interest in the land upon which the trailer is situated to support the homestead claim, the court must ascertain whether the trailer is the type of property which may constitute a homestead in Nebraska. The applicable statute provides that the homestead shall consist of the dwelling house and the land upon which the same is situated. R.S. 40-101, 1943. In Corey v. Schuster, 44 Neb. 269, 62 N.W. 470, 472, the Nebraska Supreme Court had this to say: “The law does not contemplate by the words ‘dwelling house’ any particular kind of house.

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Bluebook (online)
97 F. Supp. 843, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-foley-ned-1951.