Keys v. Young

2 Ohio N.P. 390
CourtHighland County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. 390 (Keys v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Highland County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keys v. Young, 2 Ohio N.P. 390 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

NEWBY, J.

It appears from the pleadings and agreed statement of facts in this-case, that on the 14th day of February, 1894, the firm of Lefever & Head recovered a judgment against the plaintiff herein, before a justice of the peace, within. and for Liberty township, Highland county, Ohio, for the sum of $24.67 and costs. On the 8th day of January, 1895, an execution was issued on said judgment and placed in the hands of the defendant herein, who was then a constable of said township. Said constable on the 19th day of January, 1895, duly levied said execution on eighty-three shocks of corn, the property of plaintiff, and sold said property on the-[391]*39131st day of January, 1895. On the 31st day of January, 1895, and before the sale by the constable , the plaintiff, Keys, being a resident of Ohio and a married man living with his wife and family, and not being himself the owner of a homestead, selected the property levied upon in lieu of a homestead, and demanded that the same be set off and allowed to him undei and by virtue of section 5441, Rev. Stat., which allows personal property levied upon to be set off in lieu of a homestead when the debtor has no homestead and makes a selection of said property for that purpose.

The constable disregarded this selection and demand, and sold the property to satisfy the writ. Thereupon the judgment debtor, Keys, brought this action against the constable to recover the value of the property levied upon and sold. It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that at the time of the levy and sale, his wife, with whom he was and still is living, was not the owner of a homestead. And this question whether the wife was the owner of a homestead, and th.e value of the property seized; are the only questions in dispute.

The facts upon which the plaintiff founds his contention that his wife was not the owner of a homestead, are agreed to by the parties. It is agreed that at the time of the levy and sale, the plaintiff and his wife were living together on a farm, of about one hundred and fifty acres, situated in Highland county, Ohio. That said farm was owned by the plaintiff’s wife and her two sisters in common, they having derived their title thereto by devise from their father. Mrs. Keys owned no other real estate. The case is submitted to the court without the intervention of a jLU7-

The question presented upon the foregoing facts, is, was the wife of Keys, at the time of the levy and sale by the constable, the owner of a homestead in the farm occupied by her and her husband, and owned by her and her two sisters in co-tenancy?

If she was the owner of a homestead at that time, her husband would be denied the privilege of claiming any personal property in lieu of a homestead. Dwinnéll v. Edwards, 23 Ohio St. 603.

As the decision of the question turns upon the ownership by the wife of a homestead, the case should be looked at in the same manner as if the execution had been against her, and levied upon her property.

We have then the question of law squarely presented, whether the judgment debtor can demand a homestead in real estate held by him in common with others, under the homestead exemption law of Ohio.'

This question has never been passed upon by the Supreme Court of this state, though a very strong dictum appears in the opinion of the court in the case of Hill v. Myers, 46 Oiho St. at page 193.

The decisions of courts of last resort in other states where the question has arisen, are not at all harmonious where the exemption act does notin terms allow the homestead in undivided property. The cases holding different views on the question are cited to sec. 54 of Freeman oh Co-tenancy and Partition.

This author, after discussing the reasons advanced for the different conclusions arrived at, endorses the doctrine announced by those courts which hold the homestead exemption allowable in undivided real estate, as having sounder reason to support it. He says, “But we see no sufficient reason, even in the absence of statutes directly bearing upon the subject,for holding that a general homestead act does not apply to lands held in co-tenancy. The fact that a homestead claim might savor of such an assumption of an exclusive right as is inconsistent with the rights of the other co-tenant, and that the maintenance of such claim might interfere [392]*392with proceedings for partition, form no very satisfactory reason for denying the exemption.

‘‘If the rights of the co-tenant are threatened or endangered,he,alone, should lie permitted to call for protection and redress. The law will not sanction any use of the homestead m prejudice of his rights. But as long as his interests are respected, or so nearly respected that he feels no inclination to complain, why should some person having no interest in the co-tenancy be allowed to avail himself of the law of co-tenancy for his own, and not for the co-tenant’s gain?

“The homestead laws have an object perfectly well understood,and in the promotion of which, courts may well employ the most liberal and humane rules of interpretation. This object is to insure to the unfortunate debtor, and his equally unfortunate and more helpless family, the shelter and the influence of a home. A co-tenant may lawfully employ every parcel of the lands of the co-tenancy. He may employ them not merely for cultivation or/for other means of making profits, but may also build houses and barns, plant shrubs and flowers, and surround himself with all the comforts of a heme. His wife and children may, of right, occupy and enjoy the premises with him. Upon the lands of which he is but a part owner, he may and in fact he frequently does, obtain all the advantages-of a home. These advantages are none the less worthy of being secured to him and his family in adversity, because the other co-tenants are entitled to equal advantage in the same home. That he has not the whole, is a very unsatisfactory and a very inhuman reason for depriving him of that which he has.” Freeman on Co-tenancey and Partition, sec. 54.

In Vol. 2 of Ballards’ Annual of the Laiv of Ileal Property, sec. 287, under the heading “As to the right of exemption and who may claim it, ” an epitome of cases is given, some holding that the right may be alloived in undivided real estate, and others deciding the contrary.

But these cases denying the homestead claim in undivided lands are cited and considered by Freeman, and are opposed by the better considered cases and the weight of authority on the subject. This same author (Freeman) in his work on Executions,refers to this question and re-affirms the statement of the doctrine above stated, and makes the further statement that the tendency of the courts is becoming more favorable to the homestead claim in lands held in co-tenancy, and that he is unaware of any well considered case in the last fifteen years disputing the claim. 1 Freeman on Executions (2nd Ed.) sec. 23.

But it seems to me, that bearing in mind the object and purpose of our homestead law, our own Supreme Court has furnished us a rule for the construction of the act which will lead inevitably to the same conclusion reached by .Mr. Freeman. In the case of-Sears v. Hanks, reported in 14 Ohio St., in the opinion by Judge Scott at page 300-301, this language is used: “The humane policy of the homestead act (S. & C. St. 1145) seeks not the protection of the debtor; but its object is to protect his family from the inhumanity which would deprive its dependent members of ahorne.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keys-v-young-ohctcomplhighla-1895.