In re the Estate of Croghan

28 P. 570, 92 Cal. 370, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1214
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1891
DocketNo. 14200
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 28 P. 570 (In re the Estate of Croghan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California 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 the Estate of Croghan, 28 P. 570, 92 Cal. 370, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1214 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

McFarland, J.

This is an appeal by certain brothers and sisters, and children of deceased brothers and sisters, of the deceased from an order setting aside absolutely to the surviving wife a certain homestead. There is no attack made on the general validity of the homestead in question. It was the family residence, was not of greater value than five thousand dollars, a proper declaration had been made and recorded, and it was in all respects in law a valid homestead. But the contention of appellants is, that it should have been set apart to the widow only for a limited period, after which it should go by operation of law to the appellants as heirs. The facts upon which this contention arises are these: 1. The said homestead was the separate property of the deceased; and 2. The declaration of homestead was made by the deceased himself. Upon these facts we are clear that the homestead vested absolutely in the widow as survivor, and that the order appealed from was right.

It is impossible for a state of facts to be more completely covered by a statutory provision than are the facts in this case covered by section 1474 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides as follows: “If the homestead selected by the husband and wife, or either of them, during their coverture, and recorded while both were living, was selected from the community property, or from the separate property of the person selecting or joining in the selection of the same, it vests, on the death of the husband or wife, absolutely in the survivor. " If the homestead was selected from the separate property of either the husband or the wife, without his or her consent, it vests, on the death of the person from whose property it was selected, in his or her heirs, subject to the power of the superior court to assign it for a limited period to the family of the decedent.”

The contention is, that section 1265 of the Civil Code and section 1168 of the Code of Civil Procedure are in conflict with said section 1474; and a good deal of reasoning is indulged in by counsel to show what the rule is when two different sections of the codes are contr[372]*372adictor and irreconcilably conflicting. But such is not the case here. The clear and explicit language of section 1474 deals in detail with the very identical case of a homestead on separate property created by the owner of such property. The legislative mind, when enacting it, was directed specially to that particular kind of homestead; and its intent, thus directly and clearly expressed, •is not to be taken as changed by other sections which use general language, and in which there is no direct reference made to a homestead carved out of separate property by the will of its owner. All the sections cited, when read together, clearly mean that when a homestead has been selected by one spouse" out of the separate property of the other, without the consent of the latter, then upon the death, of the one from whose property it was selected, it vests in his or her heirs, subject to the power of the court to assign it for a limited period to the family of the decedent; but when the selection has been from the separate property of the person selecting or joining in the selection of the same,” then it goes absolutely to the survivor. The cases cited by appellant do not establish any other doctrine.

Order afflrmed.

De Haven, J., and Shaepstein, J., concurred.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Oylear v. Oylear
208 P. 857 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1922)
Williams v. Williams
151 P. 10 (California Supreme Court, 1915)
Estate of Clavo
93 P. 295 (California Court of Appeal, 1907)
Saddlemire v. Stockton Savings & Loan Society
79 P. 381 (California Supreme Court, 1904)
In Re the Estate of Fath
64 P. 995 (California Supreme Court, 1901)
Lockbihler v. Young
55 P. 1011 (California Supreme Court, 1899)
Dickey v. Gibson
45 P. 15 (California Supreme Court, 1896)
In re Estate of Schade
4 Coffey 440 (California Superior Court, San Francisco County, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P. 570, 92 Cal. 370, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-croghan-cal-1891.