In re Swearinger

23 F. Cas. 527, 5 Sawy. 52, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 138, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedDecember 13, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 527 (In re Swearinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Swearinger, 23 F. Cas. 527, 5 Sawy. 52, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 138, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64 (D. Nev. 1877).

Opinion

HILLYER, District Judge.

The contention in this case is as to the true construction of the first section of the law of Nevada, commonly called the homestead act. Under that section, can a homestead be ex[528]*528empted from forced sale when tlie dwelling-house and land claimed are owned and possessed by the debtor as a tenant in common with another?

At the outset, counsel for the assignee invokes a well-known rule of construction, which, he claims, is decisive. The first section of the Nevada homestead act (1 Comp. Laws, 60), is an exact copy of the first section of the California act of 1860. The courts of California have, from the first decision in 1855, held that no homestead could •be carved out of a tenancy in common, and counsel insists that this construction was adopted when the section was copied. The thing to be ascertained is the intention of the legislature of Nevada, “but this intention is to be searched for in the words which the legislature has employed to convey it.” [The Paulina v. U. S.] 7 Crunch [11 U. S.] 52. Before rules of construction are invoked, there must be something to construe. If the words used express clearly the sense and intention of the law they must always govern. For it is not permitted to interpret what is plain and manifest, as it stands in no need of interpretation. Smith’s Comp. § 545. It would be hard to find language freer from uncertainty or ambiguity than that of the law now under consideration to express the undoubted intention of the law-givers to protect the home of a family from forced sale. “The homestead consisting of a quantity of land, together with the dwelling-house thereon, shall not be subject to forced sale,” etc. These are the words. To my mind they present a sense too obvious to admit of more than one interpretation, and there is no occasion to go further and inquire how they may have been restrained in their meaning by the courts of another state. Were this otherwise, the constitution of Nevada is so much more explicit than that of California, in the section providing for a homestead exemption, that it must receive great consideration in construing any law passed in pursuance of its provisions. Const. Nev. art. 4, § 80.

In the case of Hawthorne v. Smith, 3 Nev. 182, the court say, speaking of section 82:' “It is evident the constitution intended that at all times the homestead should be exempt from forced sale, except in a few enumerated instances. It is equally evident the legislature intended to carry out this policy;” and in that case it was held that registration of the homestead might be made after an attachment levied on it, and indeed at any time before actual sale. In so holding, the supreme court of Nevada disregarded the decisions of the courts of California upon a precisely similar provision of the homestead law of that state, to the effect that registration was a condition precedent to exemption from sale, and that liens attaching before such registration were valid. In re Reed’s Estate. 23 Cal. 410; McQuade v. Whaley, 31 Cal. 520. See, also, In re Wal-ley's Estate, 11 Nev. 260; Noble v. Hook, 24 Cal. 638. If then the language of the law and constitution of Nevada is free from ambiguity; if there is no room for doubt about the intention with which that language was used, that intention must govern in spite of the decisions of the courts of another state, which do violence to that language and intention. Van Doren v. Tjader, 1 Nev. 380; Little v. Smith, 4 Scam. 402; Gray v. Askew, 3 Ohio, 466, 480.

[I come then to the more important inquiry whether in any ease under the laws of Nevada, lands held by tenants in common can be the subject of a homestead exemption? Is there anything denying this right to a tenant in common, either in the language of the constitution or law, or in their spirit and general policy?] 2

“A homestead,” says the constitution, “as provided by law, shall be exempt from forced sale,” etc. “The homestead,” says the law, “consisting of a quantity of land, with the dwelling-house thereon, * * * shall not be subject to forced sale. * * *” There is nothing here, surely, denying the benefits of the exemption to a tenant in common. Indeed, the courts which have made the denial do it not upon what the law-giver has said, but what he has not said. If a tenant in common can, as a matter of fact, have a home on the lands held in common, the language used applies to him as fairly as it does to any one. The homestead is one thing, the title to it another. Nor is there anything in the spirit and policy of homestead exemptions which does not apply with as full force to a tenant in common as to any other person.

Two reasons have been given for denying a homestead to tenants in common, under general homestead laws substantially like that of Nevada: 1. In states whose laws require the claimant to be the owner of the property, because it requires the title of all the tenants to constitute an ownership; 2. That the statute did not contemplate carving homesteads out of tenancies in common, “because it has not provided any mode for their separation and ascertainment” Wolf v. Fleischacker, 5 Cal. 244; Thurston v. Maddocks, 6 Allen, 427. The Nevada law omits the word owner in prescribing the 'qualification of those who may claim the exemption, so that the first objection loses nearly, if not quite, all its force here.

The second reason hardly seems a satisfactory one for refusing to obey a plain and positive injunction of the law-makers, even if the difficulties are great. But I think, that on examination, the supposed difficulties will be found chiefly imaginary. The law does not attempt to guarantee a perfect, title to the premises, or, necessarily, an exclusive ownership and possession, but it protects whatever right, title and interest the [529]*529debtor has from forced sale. The object of the law is to protect from forced sale the homestead in which lives the family of a man who is so poor as to need such protection. Now a homestead, owned and occupied in conjunction with a co-tenant, is as much a shelter to the family of a poor man, as if the land were owned in severalty. The co-tenants may have rights to adjust among themselves, but a creditor has, if possible, less interest than he would have if his debt- or owned the land separately instead of jointly.

In the case of Spencer v. Geissman, 37 Cal. 69, one having possession of certain premises, while the title in fee was in a stranger, filed a declaration of homestead thereon, and aft-erwards acquired the title in fee. In holding this declaration good. Sawyer, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court, says: “There is no question made as to its being a homestead if a party having a naked possession only, the title being in a stranger, can acquire a homestead right in the land so possessed. The statute does not specify the kind of a title a party shall have in order to enable him to secure a homestead. It says nothing about title. The homestead right given by the statute is impressed on the land to the extent of the interest of the claimant in it, not on the title merely. The actual homestead as against everybody who has not a better title, becomes impressed with the legal homestead right by taking the proceedings prescribed by the statute. The estate or interest of the occupant, be it more or less, thereby becomes exempt from forced sales.” This view of the law, the correctness of which I think cannot be doubted, will give a tenant in common a homestead to the extent of his interest in the premises claimed. It seems to me to overthrow the case of Wolf v.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 527, 5 Sawy. 52, 17 Nat. Bank. Reg. 138, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-swearinger-nvd-1877.