In re Irving

220 F. 969, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1743
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedFebruary 16, 1915
DocketNo. B-90
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 F. 969 (In re Irving) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Irving, 220 F. 969, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1743 (D. Ariz. 1915).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, District Judge.

Thomas George Irving was on the 18th day of March, 1914, by this court adjudged a bankrupt, and in due course the matter was referred to Fred A. Larson, Esq., one of the referees in bankruptcy. In due course the bankrupt filed his. schedule, in which he claimed as exempt from the acts of Congress relating to bankruptcy the tinexpired portion of the leasehold interest held by him in and to the property herein referred to and described. The referee’s certificate on review herein recites;

“In Schedule B (5) of the debtor’s petition, the debtor claimed as exempted from (by) the acts of Congress relating to bankruptcy, under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Arizona, the following described property, to wit: ‘The unexpired portion of the leasehold interest held by petitioner under and by virtue of that written lease described as follows, to wit: Dated April 15, 1912, running for a period of five years'from date thereof, in which Mrs. M. E. Sargent is lessor, and George Irving, the petitioner herein, is lessee, which lease reserves a rental of fifty dollars (850.00) per annum; said rental having been paid to April 15, 1914, and demising that parcel of real property situated at Alhambra, Maricopa county, Arizona, and bounded and described as follows to wit: Beginning'at a point on Grand avenue approximately 100 feet north of a lot owned by Henry Eenaud, where a division fence forms an angle with the north edge of Grand avenue; running thence north 417 feet; thence west 417 feet to Grand avenue; thence along Grand avenue 490 feet to the place of beginning — containing approximately two acres. Said lease contains a covenant by lessor that lessee may remove all improvements placed upon the leased premises by him; and lessee has constructed a house thereon at a cost of sixteen hundred and thirty-eight dollars ($1,688.00).’
“On May 4, 1914, the trustee in the above-entitled matter filed his report of exempt property therein, in which he reported that the above-described leasehold interest had been designated and set apart by him to be retained by the bankrupt as exempt property. On May 24, 1914, the Standard Wooden Ware Company, one of the unsecured creditors in the above entitled matter, filed its ‘Exceptions to Report of Trustee, Setting Off Exemptions,’ which exceptions, so far as they appertain to the leasehold above mentioned, are based on the ground ‘that neither said leasehold interest nor the improvements on the land covered by said lease are exempt under the laws of the state of Arizona, and that the said bankrupt is not entitled under such laws to have the said leasehold interest or the said improvements set apart to him as exempt.’ On September 24, 1914, after both the excepting creditor and bankrupt had been fully heard upon said report of the trustee and the exceptions thereto, the referee made and entered an order ‘that the leasehold interest described in the bankrupt’s schedules, and claimed therein as exempt under the laws of the state of Arizona, is not exempt, and that the said leasehold is subject to the disposition of the trustee in bankruptcy of the above-entitled matter,’ basing said order upon the provisions of chapter 1, title 20, Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, Civil Code.
[971]*971“The evidence introduced at said hearing showed that on February 13, 19.14, Nellie Irving, the lawful wife of the bankrupt, made an attempt in good faith to secure as exempt to the family of herself and her husband, under the laws of the state of Arizona, the leasehold interest above described, together with all appurtenances thereunto belonging, by executing and recording in the office of the county recorder of Maricopa county, Ariz. a declaration of homestead as to said leasehold, but that the declaration so recorded was irregular, in that it was merely acknowledged, and not sworn to, as required by law. That on July 22, 1914, and immediately upon the said Nellie Irving’s learning of the irregularity contained in the above-mentioned ‘Declaration of Homestead,’ she made out and recorded in the office of the county recorder of Maricopa county, Ariz., a claim of homestead as to said leasehold, which claim was regularly sworn to by her according to the laws of the state of Arizona. That at the date of the filing of the above-mentioned trustee’s report of exempt property, and for more than a year prior thereto, the bankrupt was the head of a family, and resided, together with his above-mentioned wife and their children, in the county of Maricopa, state of Arizona, in that certain house hereinafter mentioned, which is located upon the land demised under the above-mentioned lease. That said house had been constructed upon said land by the bankrupt, during the term of the above-mentioned lease. That the bankrupt, for more that a year prior to the date when the trustee filed his aforesaid report of exempt property, had conducted a retail merchahtile business in the front part of said building, and had lived with his family as aforesaid in the rear portion of said building. That neither said bankrupt nor his said wife claim or hold any other homestead than the leasehold above mentioned. That said lease provides that if the lessee therein, the bankrupt herein, ‘does not buy the place or renew the lease, he will have the privilege of removing all improvements except the well.’ That said leasehold interest, together with all privileges thereunder, including the right to remove said building, are the community property of the bankrupt and his wife, Nellie Irving.”
Said referee disallowed said homestead exemption, holding that:
“The leasehold interest described in the bankrupt’s schedules, and claimed therein as exempt under the laws of the state of Arizona, is not exempt, and that the said leasehold is subject) to the disposition of the trustee in bankruptcy of the above-entitled matter.”

The questions presented on this review are:

(1) Whether this leasehold interest in the land above described, together with the store building and dwelling house combined, which has been constructed upon the same by the bankrupt as aforesaid, may be claimed as a homestead under the provisions of chapter 1, title 20, Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, Civil Code, and set apart to the bankrupt as exempt.

(2) Whether the bankrupt and his aforesaid wife have sufficiently complied with the laws of the United States appertaining to bankruptcy, and the laws of the state of Arizona appertaining to homestead exemptions, to entitle the bankrupt to have the above-described leasehold interest and all privileges thereunder set apart to him as a homestead.

[1] 1. Sections 3288, 3289, and 3290 (chapter 1, title 20), Revised Statutes Arizona 1913, Civil Code, are as follows:

“3288. Every person who is the head of a family, and whoso family resides within this state, may hold as a homestead, exempt from attachment, execution and forced sale, real property to be selected by him or her, which homestead shall he in one compact body, not to exceed in value the sum of four thousand dollars, and shall consist of the dwelling house in which the claimant resides and the land on which the same is situated or of land that the claimant shall designate, provided the same is in one compact body.
“3289. Any person wishing to avail himself or herself of the provisions [972]*972of the foregoing section shall make out under oath his or her claim in writing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 F. 969, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-irving-azd-1915.