Magnolia Milling Co. v. Rommel

297 P. 191, 161 Wash. 398, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 659
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1931
DocketNo. 22866. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 P. 191 (Magnolia Milling Co. v. Rommel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magnolia Milling Co. v. Rommel, 297 P. 191, 161 Wash. 398, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 659 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beals, J.

During the year 1924, J. B. Rommel and Elsbeth Rommel, his wife, entered into a contract for the purchase of twenty-seven and one-half acres of land in the southern portion of Snohomish county. The contract price was $7,750, of which one thousand dollars was paid in cash, the balance, with interest, being payable in annual installments of seven hundred fifty dollars each. Mr. and Mrs. Rommel entered into possession of the property, and operated the same as a dairy ranch until June, 1927, when they disposed of the last of their herd of dairy cattle.

Not long after the signing of the contract, the Rom-mels paid in full for twelve and one-half acres of land, which they conveyed to a Mr. Wibbleman. Later, they obtained a deed for an additional two and one-half acres of land, of which Mr. Wibbleman contracted to purchase two acres. On the remaining half-acre, to which Mr. and Mrs. Rommel had procured a deed, they *400 drilled a well, from which, was procured the supply of water necessary for their ranch operations.

This was the situation during the summer of 1927, when plaintiff brought suit against Mr. and Mrs. Rommel upon an account for feed, theretofore furnished for the dairy stock. In this action, plaintiff sued out a writ of attachment, which was levied on the fifteen acres of land, including the two acres which the Rom-mels had agreed to sell to Mr. Wibbleman. October 5, 1927, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff, which judgment referred to the writ of attachment theretofore levied, and ordered the land attached sold, and the proceeds applied in satisfaction of the judgment. Thereafter the land was sold to plaintiff, and, no redemption having been effected, in due time a sheriff’s deed issued. Mr. Wibbleman completed the payments under his contract, and received from plaintiff a deed to his two acres. Four days after the levy of the writ of attachment, Mr. and Mrs. Rommel conveyed the half-acre of land on which is located the well to their son, John Rommel, the deed purporting to have been given in satisfaction of an alleged debt due from Mr. and Mrs. Rommel to their son, on account of wages earned and money advanced.

After the rendition of judgment in favor of plaintiff, and the filing of an abstract thereof in Snohomish county, but shortly before the sheriff’s sale of the land to plaintiff, Mrs. Rommel filed a declaration of homestead covering the twelve and one-half acres of land remaining undisposed of out of the original purchase. After receipt of the sheriff’s deed, plaintiff demanded from Mrs. Rommel possession of the premises, and, upon her refusal to comply with the demand, this action was brought to obtain possession of the twelve and one-half acres of land covered by Mrs. Rommel’s declaration of homestead, and the half-acre of land *401 then standing in the name of John Rommel. Prom a judgment in favor of plaintiff, awarding it possession of the premises, and quieting its title, defendants appeal.

Appellant Elsbeth Rommel, who has succeeded to all the rights in the premises with which we are concerned formerly enjoyed by the community composed of herself and her former husband, J. B. Rommel, contends that chapter 193, Laws of 1927, p. 265 (Rem. 1927 Sup., § 528), the existing homestead exemption statute, is unconstitutional, as not in accord with art. 19 of the state constitution, which article, appellant contends, is self-executing.

The present statute referring to the selection of a homestead was first considered by this court in the ease of State ex rel. Columbia Valley Lumber Co. v. Superior Court, 147 Wash. 574, 266 Pac. 731. In that case, it was held that the right to claim a homestead did not become a vested right until the filing of the declaration, and that the law in force at that time should therefore control. It followed that, as the owners of the property claiming a homestead had not filed their declaration prior to the enactment of chapter 193, Laws of 1927, p. 265, the amendment of the law did not interfere with any vested right on the part of the defendants.

In the later case of Spencer v. Pacific Mercantile Agency, 154 Wash. 191, 281 Pae. 482, it was held that the 1927 amendment did not apply to one who, after the rendition of a judgment against him, should acquire real property which he desired to occupy as his homestead, and that under such circumstances an effective declaration of homestead could be filed. In the course of its opinion, the court said:

“The amended law of 1927 was properly applied in State ex rel. Columbia Valley Lumber Co. v. Superior *402 Court, 147 Wash. 574, 266 Pac. 731, and no doubt in the only way that the legislature intended that it should be applied. As to all those who are in a position to select a homestead before judgment, there is no denial of any constitutional right or privilege and the act is not unconstitutional as to them. Desimone v. Shields, 152 Wash. 353, 277 Pac. 829, and cases there cited.”

Appellant Elsbeth Rommel undoubtedly comes within the classification referred to in the foregoing quotation. She owned and occupied the premises prior to the rendition of respondent’s judgment, and enjoyed an ample opportunity to file a declaration of homestead on those premises prior to the date of the rendition of the judgment in respondent’s favor.

Article 19 of the constitution of this state reads as follows:

“The legislature shall protect by law from forced sale a certain portion of the homestead and other property of all heads of families. ’ ’

This section of the constitution directly imposes upon the state legislature the duty of setting up some statutory procedure by which the owner of real estate, being the head of a family, may protect from sale on execution a portion of his property as his homestead. The constitutional provision does not provide for the amount of land which may be so exempted from sale on execution, nor the value thereof; nor does it provide for the filing of any declaration of homestead nor of any document of a similar nature. The provision of the constitution is manifestly not self-executing, and we hold that the act of 1927 above referred to is not unconstitutional as in violation thereof.

Mrs. Rommel further contends that the constitutional provision, in any event, limits the power of the legislature, in so far as homestead legislation is *403 concerned, to the law which was in force at the time of the adoption of the constitution, and that all future legislation on this subject is prohibited, save in regard to certain particulars with which we are not here concerned. We find no merit in this contention, and conclude that the statutory enactments with which we are here concerned, providing for the selection of homesteads, are within the power of the legislature, and consequently valid.

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 191, 161 Wash. 398, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-milling-co-v-rommel-wash-1931.