In Re Laughlin's Estate

134 P.2d 961, 170 Or. 450, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 16
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 P.2d 961 (In Re Laughlin'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 Laughlin's Estate, 134 P.2d 961, 170 Or. 450, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 16 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

BELT, J.

This is an appeal from an order denying the petition of a widow to have a homestead set aside for her and also certain furniture as exempt from execution.

The petitioner, Anna Maude Laughlin, and the decedent were married in May, 1940. They lived in an apartment house which decedent managed, but did not own, in the city of Portland. Decedent owned two houses in the city — one at 2028 N. E. Multnomah street and the other at 1534 S. E. 25th street. The Multnomah street house was rented furnished. The 25th street house — the one in controversy — was also rented at $50 a month to Mrs. Dora Bruce who operated a boarding and rooming house. The house had an appraised value of $3,650 and was encumbered by a mortgage on which there was due approximately $1,924.

*452 The decedent had a paralytic stroke in January, 1941, and was placed in a so-called convalescent home. Mrs. Laughlin managed the apartment house for a short period but was obliged to give up such work to take care of her husband. Decedent died testate on June 7,1941, leaving as his survivors a widow, the petitioner, and children by a former marriage all of whom are of age and are defendants herein. Decedent’s widow rejected the will and elected to have the probate court set aside a homestead to her.

About three months before the death of her husband, the petitioner, who was in dire financial circumstances, went, at the request of her husband, to the boarding house on 25th street for the purpose, she says, of “making it her home. ’ ’ Mrs. Laughlin testified that her husband told her to go over there and “make that my home and that when he got better he would come over there. ’ ’ She said that, in keeping with his instructions, she packed their things and some of the furniture and went •to the house on 25th street to make it her home and that she has been there ever since. She had no money and no other place to go.

. Mrs. Edna Martin testified that she heard decedent tell his wife, “That’s the place for you to go. That is our home and you can go there to make that your home. ’ ’

Mrs. Margaret Bryant, a nurse who cared for decedent, testified that he told her, “I’ll soon be able to walk home that far (referring to the house in question) and that will be our permanent home. ’ ’

Mrs. Laughlin also thus testified on cross examination:

“ Q. Isn’t it a fact that you went in there as Mrs. Bruce’s tenant? A. No, I didn’t go as a tenant.
*453 “Q. How did you go? A. Well, I just went in, and she knew that I was Mr. Laughlin’s wife, and I told her I wanted to reserve part of the household, and she even moved her fruit out of here, the fruit room, so I could have a room for my own, and she just about turned me loose into everything because she felt that Mr. Laughlin sent me, and she knew he sent me there, and it was all right with her. Of course I didn’t give her any orders about how she should run her boarders or anything.” (Italics ours.)

At such time Mrs. Bruce was holding the premises under a month to month rental as the three-year lease had expired a few months prior thereto. It appears that the rent had become delinquent and there was “$100 to $150” due.

Relative to her occupancy of the house, Mrs. Laughlin testified:

“Q. After you moved in there, into this apartment, or into this house, Mrs. Laughlin, this next month, say for the month of March, do you know how much rent Mrs. Bruce paid? A. In March? Oh, no, I don’t know; I couldn’t say exactly what she paid.
“Q. Was it a reduced amount? A. Well, she would — she was bringing up some back pay, so it would be more; it wasn’t as much in actual cash, but you understand my board came out of that, and she was bringing up her back pay.
“Q. How much credit was she to get for you? A. Well, I think about — I think she was to have— to bring up sixteen and a quarter of her back pay each month, and then I guess she charged me about—
“A. About sixteen — it would be about thirty-two fifty, I think, all told, or something like that.
*454 “ Q. In the event, Mrs. Laughlin, that, say, there were maybe two vacant rooms now, and she wanted to rent them, would you have anything to say about that at all? A. No, I don’t reserve that part of the house.
“Q. So that she still has control of the House? A. Yes, she rents the house, she rents the rooms, and I just reserve a part. ’ ’

The tenant, Mrs. Bruce, did not testify.

The petitioner occupied a portion of the house as her home. The fact that she leased the remainder of the house for business purposes does not deprive her of her homestead rights in such property: Moody v. Baker, 142 Or. 559, 20 P. (2d) 1069; Smith v. Kay, 153 Or. 80, 54 P. (2d) 1160, 55 P. (2d) 794. As said in Re Potter’s Estate, 154 Or. 167, 59 P. (2d) 253, referring with approval to Smith v. Kay, supra:

“The doctrine of that case is that if a building, which is the actual abode of the homestead claimant, contains other apartments which are rented to tenants, that fact does not destroy the character of the building or the ground upon which it is located as a homestead.”

Also see: 26 Am. Jur. 51, Homestead §'83, and cases in note 114 A. L. R. 226. If, in the instant case, the lease included the entire premises, a different question would be presented.

This court, in keeping with the well-established rule in other jurisdictions, liberally construes homestead laws to the end that the beneficent purposes of such remedial legislation be accomplished. It is the policy of the law to preserve a home for a widow who may live sheltered beyond the reach of urgent creditors or economic misfortune. The stability and welfare of *455 the state demands the preservation of the home: Moody v. Baker, supra; 26 Am. Jur. 14, Homstead § 12; Banfield v. Schulderman, 137 Or. 167, 296 P. 1066, 298 P. 905, 89 A. L. R. 504; De Haven & Son Hardware Co. v. Schultz, 122 Or. 493, 259 P. 778; Paulson v. Hurlburt, 93 Or. 419, 183 P. 937.

In the light of this record — which in many particulars is vague and incomplete — we are called upon to determine whether the petitioner was merely another “roomer and hoarder” or whether she was occupying the 25th street house as a homestead within the meaning of the statute. Section 6-1301, O. C. L. A., provides that ‘ ‘ The homestead must be the actual abode of and occupied by the owner, his or her spouse * * Prom the language of the act it is clear that the mere fact that decedent never occupied the premises in question as a home would not, in itself, preclude his widow from exercising the right of homestead exemption: Bancroft’s Probate Practice, §711.

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Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 961, 170 Or. 450, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-laughlins-estate-or-1943.