Meyer v. Meyer

23 Iowa 359
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 11, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 23 Iowa 359 (Meyer v. Meyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyer v. Meyer, 23 Iowa 359 (iowa 1867).

Opinion

Dillon, J.

I. Of all statutes, none should be plainer, more exact and certain in meaning, than those regulating the distribution and descent of property. It may be quite confidently affirmed, that of all existing statutes in this State, none are, in many material respects, more obscure and uncertain than those which undertake to define what becomes of, and who is entitled to, a man’s property upon his death. In illustration of this remark, we may refer to the embarrassing questions which have arisen under the act respecting aliens. Rev. ch. 100, art. 6; Perczell v. Sindt, 21 Iowa, 540; Stemple v. Herminghouse, 3 G. Greene, 408; Krogan v. Kinney, 15 Iowa, 242; Rheim v. Robbins, 20 Id. 45; Greenfield v. Stanforth, 21 Id. 595. And also, under the act of March 15, 1858, prescribing the descent of property. Rev. ch. 100, art. 7; Norris v. McGaffick, 21 Iowa, 201.

And now this record presents two similar questions of equal difficulty, and that is left to judicial construction which should be unmistakably defined by legislative words.

Perceiving that unless the statutes, in this respect, are revised, many other questions of great doubt will arise, we limit our decision strictly to the case in hand, with reference to which the subsequent observations are to be taken.

i. homestead : widow cannot enjoy boa. The plaintiff having had, at her own instance, the only dwelling-house and the fifteen and sixty-three hundreths acres of land set off to her in fee as dower, can she have assigned, or set apart to her, in additjon this, twenty-four and thirty-seven hun[370]*370dreths acres, or, enough with her dower to make forty acres, the amount to which the husband would have been entitled as a homestead ? We think not.

The homestead right now claimed by the wife is based upon chapter ninety-eight of the Bevision. The legal title to all the land was in the testator, John Meyer.

Now the statute (Bev. § 2298) is express, that, “subject to the rights of the surviving husband or wife, as declared by law, the homestead may be devised, like other real estate of the testator.”

The testator did devise it to his sons. This he could do, but this- disposition must be subject to the rights of the plaintiff, his surviving wife. What are those rights ?

As to homestead, those rights are defined by section 2295 of the Bevision, which enacts, that, “ upon the death of either husband or wife, the survivor may continue td possess and occupy the whole homestead until it is otherwise disposed of according to law.” This gives to the survivor the right “ to possess- and occupy,” but does not confer title.

Bor the argument, it may be admitted, that, if dower had never been assigned to the plaintiff, or if she refused to have it assigned, she might, as the head of the family, have continued to occupy the house used as a home at the time of her husband’s death (Bev., §§ 2278, 2295), and forty acres of land in connection with the house, as long as she should see proper, and against the wishes of the heirs or devisees of the husband.

But, while thus “possessing and occupying,” in her character as the surviving head of the family, she could not alien or dispose of the land. The land has been disposed of by the will .of the husband; and this disposition the statute, as we have before seen, allows him to make. Bev. § 2298. Now, it is plain, that the statute, [371]*371in reference to the occupancy and disposition of homesteads, contemplates a house used as a home.

Under other provisions of the statute (ch. 151, Laws 1862, p. 573; Eev. § 2126, et seq.), the widow has proceeded to have her dower assigned to her, so as to include the dwelling-house and enough of the land to equal the amount in value to which she was entitled.

This she now owns in fee. She may dispose of it as she pleases. If she continued to occupy it as a home — as her home — it would doubtless have impressed upon it the homestead character and be exempt as such. Eev. §§ 2295-2297; act April 8, 1862, Laws 1862, p. 117, § 2.

The fee simple title thus acquired by the plaintiff, supersedes or takes the place of the possessory right which she would otherwise have had as the surviving wife.

We see no warrant in the law for annexing to this fee simple title, a homestead right in other land.

The title to this twenty-four and thirty-seven hundredths acres, under the will, is in the sons. If a homestead right were allowed therein to the widow, the title would not be in her. It would still be in the sons, subject to the homestead right. So that we should have this result: the house and the fifteen and sixty-three hundredths would belong in fee simple to the wife; the twenty-four and thirty-seven hundredths acres would belong to the devisees, with a right in the wife to occupy it as a homestead or as part of her homestead. Such a result we do not believe was contemplated by the legislature.

Again, aside from these argumentative considerations against the claim of the plaintiff, the language of section two, of the act of April 8, 1862, above referred to, and of section 2126 of the Eevision, seems also to be against it.

Thus if the property is insusceptible of division and is ordered to be sold, the widow’s interest, though the prop[372]*372erty sold be a, homestead, is limited to one-third- of the proceeds. And with this money it is enacted that she “may procure a homestead which shall be exempt from liability for all debts, past or prospective, from which the former homestead would have been exempt in her hands.”

So by section 2426 of the Revision, she may have assigned to her as dower “ the ordinary dwelling-house and the land given by law to the husband, as a homestead, or so muoh thereof [not the whole forty acres necessarily, but so much thereof] as will be equal to the share allotted to her by the last section [that is the one-third in value], unless she prefers a different arrangement.”

The fair implication, if not the plain language, of these provisions, is against the right of a widow to claim part of what was her husband’s homestead, including the house, as her own in fee as dower, and the residue in the capacity of surviving wife of the former owner.

In other words these provisions of the statute tend very clearly to show that the legislature did not intend that the wife should enjoy at the same time, both dower and homestead in the same land. If both had been intended, then it would have been provided that if the land were sold, there should be paid to the widow the value of both, i. e. one-third of the proceeds as the value of her dower, and also the value of her possessory homestead right. But the statute gives only the value of the dower interest. This was so under the Code of 1851 (§§ 1404-1406). Tt was likewise so under the act of 1853 (Rev. 2478), which limited the widow to one-third of the yearly rent, making no allowance for the value of any homstead right in the land sold. And the act of 1862 substantially and almost literally restored sections 1404,1405 and 1406, of the Code of 1851.

Inasmuch as, if the whole land in the case at bar had been ordered to be sold, the widow would have received [373]

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Bluebook (online)
23 Iowa 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-meyer-iowa-1867.