In re Maxson

170 F. 356, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 275
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedMay 22, 1909
DocketNo. 603
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 170 F. 356 (In re Maxson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Maxson, 170 F. 356, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 275 (N.D. Iowa 1909).

Opinion

REED, District Judge.

March 2G, 1908, Ethel Maxson was adjudged bankrupt by this court on her own petition. In her schedule of assets she listed 120 acres of land in Buchanan county, this state, as held by her under a contract of purchase thereof, and for which she would be entitled to a deed upon payment of $5,015 and interest as provided in the contract of purchase. She scheduled no other property and made no claim for any exemption, and in Schedule “B (o)” the word “None” is written.

May 5, 1908, she filed with the referee a paper duly verified by her, in which she states:

“That she scheduled as an asset a certain contract or bond Cor a deed made by O. W. Yan Orsdol, with said bankrupt, of the following described property (describing the 120 acres of land above referred to).
"That she is in possession of said land, and is a married woman, and the head of family, and she has been in possession of said land as the head of a family ever since the contract was made with said C. W. Van Orsdol, and that, before she became the owner of said properly by virtue of said contract, it was the property and the home of Laniard .Maxson, her husband, and had been such for a good many years.
“Wherefore she prays that her homestead interest in and to said promises be set off to her so as to include the ordinary dwelling house and outbuildings pertaining to said homestead tract, and that the trustee be compelled to exhaust her interest in and to the other property described in said contract after the homestead shall have been set apart to her, and she prays the court to fully protect all her rights in the premises.”

October 24, 1908, the trustee not having set apart the homestead claimed by the bankrupt, and the referee not having acted upon her application of May oth, Rarnard Maxson, husband of the bankrupt, filed with the referee a petition as follows:

“Comes now Earnard Maxson and states to the court that prior to the 2d day of November, 1907, he was the owner in fee simple of the (describing the land scheduled by the bankrupt). That on said date last mentioned he convoyed the same to C. W. Van Orsdol. That on the same date, November 2, 1907, O. W. Van Orsdol executed and delivered to his wife, Ethel Maxson, a bond for a deed for said premises, conditioned that he would convey the same to the said Ethel Maxson upon her paying to him the sum set forth in said bond. That for a number of years prior to Ms conveying the sanie to the said C. W. Yan Orsdol, he was a married man, the head of a family, and was living upon the premises described herein, with his family, and occupying it. as a homestead. That the family never removed from said premises, and are still living on said premises. That as husband of said Ethel Maxson he claims a homestead interest in said premises, and a homestead right in her equitable title lo said promises which she acquired by virtue of the bond for a deed from said C. W. Yan Orsdol. That he prays the court that in the further progress of these proceedings that his homestead rights he fully protected, and so set off under the laws of the state of Iowa as not to render them liable for any debts of his own or those of his wife.”

On the same day (October 24th) the bankrupt and her husband, Barnard Maxson, appeared before the referee by attorney and asked that a time be fixed for the hearing of their application to have the homestead set apart to them from the realty scheduled by the bankrupt, and to prescribe the notice that should be given thereof. A day was ac[358]*358cordingly fixed by the referee and notice thereof given to the trustee, who appeared and filed written objections to the applications of the bankrupt and her husband upon the grounds: First. That the debts scheduled by the bankrupt as owing by her were all contracted prior to the date of the contract under which she claimed to own the land, and that neither she nor her husband is entitled under the Iowa statute to a homestead exemption in such lands as against such debts. Second. That the bankrupt in the schedules attached to her petition made no claim for exemptions, but stated that she claimed none. Third. That the bankrupt was granted a discharge in September, 1908. He also asked the referee to enter an order, that the homestead rights of' the bankrupt be subject to the debts scheduled by her. The referee, upon a hearing, denied the applications of the bankrupt and her husband, and the request of the trustee, and each severally petitions for a review of such orders.

Upon the hearing, before the referee it was made to appear that on and prion-to November 2, 190T, Uarnard Maxson was a resident of Iowa, thehead of a family, and the owner of 120 acres of land scheduled by the bankrupt, upon which he and the bankrupt with their family had lived for many years, 40 acres thereof being their homestead and exempt to them as such under the statute of Iowa. At that time the land was incumbered for some $5,500, and on that date they, Uar-nard Maxson and his wife, the bankrupt, made a warranty deed of said 120 acres to C. W. Van Orsdol, who in consideration thereof assumed and agreed to pay the incumbrances thereon and discharge some small debts owing to him by Uarnard Maxson, in all amounting to $5,615, and on the same date, and as a part of the same transaction, Van Orsdol made and delivered to the bankrupt a written contract whereby he agrees to convey said land to her upon payment of said $5,615 and interest thereon at 6 per cent., upon terms stated in the contract, the bankrupt to have the use and possession of the property thereafter. No money or other consideration was paid by Van Orsdol for the land, and none was paid or promised to be paid to him by the bankrupt therefor other than the agreements made by her in said contract. The bankrupt and her husband continued to live upon the land thereafter, and to occupy the homestead the same as they had done for many years before. This transaction wa? in effect but a mortgage of the land to secure Van Orsdol for the amount that he should pay ¡upon the incumbrances upon the land and the indebtedness owing him by Uarnard Maxson. It also satisfactorily appeared that the failure of the bankrupt to claim a homestead exemption in the schedules attached to the petition was an oversight on the part of the attorney in preparing them, and, as soon as this was discovered, the paper of May 5th was prepared and filed with the referee for the purpose of correcting such oversight and to claim the homestead exemption. It does not appear that the trustee or any creditor of the bankrupt has been prejudiced, or that either has in .any respect changed his position because of the failure to sooner claim the exemption, unless the discharge granted to her can be said to work such prejudice.

The single question for determination, therefore, is„ Does the failure [359]*359of the bankrupt to claim the exemption in her petition in bankruptcy, or the writing of the word “None” in Schedule “B (5),” deprive her or her husband of the homestead exemption accorded to them and their family by the Iowa statute? The referee held that because the bankrupt had failed to claim the homestead exemption in the schedules filed by her, and did not formerly apply for leave to amend the schedule and claim the same therein, she thereby waived her right to the exemption. It is true that section 7 of the bankruptcy act of July 1, 1898, c. 541, 80 Stat. 548 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3425), requires a bankrupt to make and file a schedule of his property and to claim therein such exemption as he may be entitled to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 F. 356, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-maxson-iand-1909.