In re Frizzell's Estate

188 P. 707, 95 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 78
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 188 P. 707 (In re Frizzell's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Frizzell's Estate, 188 P. 707, 95 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 78 (Or. 1920).

Opinion

BENNETT, J.

The most important question in the case is whether or not the right of a widow to the exempt homestead of her deceased husband is superior to that of a devisee under his will, so that she can have such homestead set apart absolutely to her, notwithstanding the will.

1. It is claimed by the appellant that the exempt homestead may be devised away by the husband in his will, and that if it is not disposed of by will, it will descend to the heirs, and cannot be set aside in fee to the widow and children under Section 1234, L. O. L.

That section provides:

“Upon the filing of the inventory, the court or judge thereof shall make an order, setting apart, for the widow or minor children of the deceased; if any, all the property of the estate by law exempt from execution. The property thus set apart, if there be a widow, is her property, to be used or expended by her in the maintenance of herself and minor children, if any; or if there be no widow, it is the property of the minor child; or if more than one, of the minor children in equal shares, to be used or expended in the nurture and education of such child or children, by the guardian thereof, as the law directs.”

Section 221 of the Code (L. O. L.), provides:

“The homestead of any family shall be exempt from judicial sale for the satisfaction of any judgment here after obtained. Such homestead must be the actual abode of, and owned by such family or some member thereof. ’ ’

Section 226 is as follows:

‘ ‘ The homestead aforesaid shall be exempt from sale on any judicial process after the death of the person entitled thereto for the collection of any debts for which the same could not have been sold during his lifetime, but such homestead shall descend as if death did not exist. ”

[685]*685There is an apparent eontradiction between Section 226, which provides that the homestead shall descend as if death (exemption) “did not exist,” and Section 1234, which provides “that all the property exempt from execution” shall be set apart to the widow, and “the property thus set apart is her property, to be used or expended by her in the maintenance of herself and minor children”; and if these sections are construed literally the conflict becomes absolute and irreconcilable.

In Mansfield v. Hill, 56 Or. 400 (107 Pac. 471, 108 Pac. 1007), the question as to the construction of Section 1234 was not really presented. In that case the widow had obtained a divorce from the deceased prior to his death, and was decreed the custody of the minor children, and was living separate and apart from him with said children; so that the property in dispute was not the “homestead of any family” at the time of the decease of the ex-husband. Notwithstanding these facts, however, the divorced wife claimed for herself and for the children, that the property in question was a homestead and was not subject to conveyance or devise by the deceased. Under these conditions the court, speaking of the statute of exemption, said:

‘ ‘ This law is only a statute of exemption, and contains no other elements. It does not create a homestead in which the wife or children have any right or title other than the right of owner thereof, or the wife, husband, agent, or attorney of such owner, to claim it exempt from attachment, levy, or sale on execution, and this right to claim such exemption continues after the death of the owner.”

And again,—

“Therefore it is subject to devise or conveyance by the owner, or descends to the heirs under the statute. ”

[686]*686In this opinion there is no reference whatever to Section 1234.

In Wycoff v. Snapp, 72 Or. 234 (143 Pac. 902), the question was again before the court under somewhat different conditions.

In that case, Wycoff had died leaving a wife and five -minor children. After his death the homestead was set aside to the widow. Afterwards the widow was married again, and finally sold and deeded the property to one Cook. An action was brought by the minor children, through their guardian, to have the deed set aside, claiming the widow had no right to sell the property, and that she had wasted and dissipated the money received therefrom. The court, after quoting the section of the Code to which we have already alluded, said:

“We are again called upon to construe the homestead exemption act, which may truthfully be said to be one of the best intended and worst drawn laws upon the statute books. In Mansfield v. Mill, 56 Or. 400 (107 Pac. 471, 108 Pac. 1007), we had occasion to construe the words ‘such homestead shall descend as if death did pot exist, ’ which are meaningless in them-, selves, and, after much consideration, were of the opinion that by some oversight or clerical error the word ‘death’ had crept into the act in place of ‘exemption,’ and construed the act as if the sentence read ‘such homestead shall descend as if such exemption did not exist.’ The effect of this construction, to which we still adhere, is that the property descends to the heirs subject to the widow’s right of dower, and is exempt from execution for previous debts of the deceased.
“The property being thus exempt from exemption, it was competent for the County Court to set it apart to the widow for the support of herself and the minor children, as provided in Section 1234, L. O. L. As this section provides that the property so set apart to the widow ‘is her property,’ it follows naturally that [687]*687she takes a fee simple estate therein capable of alienation as well as of possession and enjoyment.”

In that case, it is true, there was no will, and the property had not been devised; but, nevertheless, the question as to whether or not the legal title to the property could be and had been properly set aside to the widow, was squarely before the court, because, if it were not so properly set aside, and could not be set aside to her, then it descended to the heirs, and the children would have taken the title, subject to the widow’s life estate, under the general provisions in relation to descent. "We think the case at bar is governed by the decision in Wycoff v. Snapp, 72 Or. 234 (143 Pac. 902).

If it were a matter of first impression, we would still be compelled to reach the same conclusion, and to reconcile Section 226 of the Code and Section 1234, by holding that Section 226 was intended to establish the general rule, where there is no widow or children, in which case the property descends as if there were no exemption. But, when there is a widow, Section 1234, being a specific provision, having reference to that particular condition, prevails, and the property may be set aside for the widow and children.

We do not find any provisions of the Codes of any other state which are in all respects exactly like our own. But we think this construction of the statute is more in harmony with the general principles governing the construction of such statutes than any other.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
188 P. 707, 95 Or. 681, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frizzells-estate-or-1920.