Roberts v. Greer

40 P. 6, 22 Nev. 318
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1895
DocketNo. 1419.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 40 P. 6 (Roberts v. Greer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Greer, 40 P. 6, 22 Nev. 318 (Neb. 1895).

Opinion

By the Court,

Bigelow, C. J.:

The question for decision in this case is whether upon the death of the wife the homestead of the parties upon community property remains in the hands of the childless husband as a homestead, and as such exempt from levy and sale foj' his debts. The answer depends upon the construction of our homestead law.

The first section of the act, as amended in 1879 (Stats. 1879, p. 140; Gen. Stats., sec. 539), provides that the husband and wife, or either of them, or other head of a family, may make and file a declaration of homestead, and that thereafter the husband and wife shall be deemed to hold said homestead as joint tenants; provided, that if the property declared upon as a homestead be the separate property of either spouse, both must join in the execution and acknowledgment of the declaration; and if such property shall retain its character of separate property until the death of one or the other of such spouses, then and in that event the homestead right' shall cease - in and upon such property, and the same belong to the party (or his or her heirs) to whom it belonged when filed upon as a homstead.

Section 4 of the act (Stats. 1879, p. 141; Gen. Stats., sec. 542) provides as follows: “The homestead and all other property exempt by law from sale under execution, shall, upon the death of either spouse, be set apart by the court as the sole property of the surviving spouse, for his or her benefit, and that of his or her legitimate child or children; and in the event of there being no surviving spouse, or legitimate child or children of either, then the property shall be *328 subject to administration, and to the payment of his or her debts or liabilities; provided, that tlie exemption made by this act and the act of which it is amendatory shall not extend to unmarried persons except when they have the care and maintenance of minor brothers or sisters, or both, or of a brother’s or sister’s minor children, or of a father or mother, or of grandparents, or unmarried sisters living in the house with them; and in all such cases the exemption shall cease upon the cessation of the terms upon which it is granted; and upon the death of such unmarried person the property shall descend to his or her heirs, as in other cases, unless disposed of by will, subject to administration and the payment of debts and liabilities.”

. It may be admitted that the statute is by no means clear upon the point involved in this action. Generally it is very crude, and many of its provisions conflicting to the last degree. Through this maze the courts must thread their way as best they may, and in endeavoring to carry out what appears to be the spirit of the law their decisions must necessarily, sometimes, seem- to fall but little short of judicial legislation. The, language used by the supreme court of Texas is very applicable to the situation here. It said: “ The homestead estate was one unknown to the common law, and is of very recent origin, having been created by statute and under the construction given by the courts. As might have been reasonably expected in the legislation upon a'new subject matter, the statutes did not in express terms anticipate and provide for every possible phase of the question, and the courts have been called upon to construe and apply the law to new cases as they would arise. This construction has almost invariably been a liberal one, and designed to carry out the beneficent purposes and intention of the legislature. This court has repeatedly called attention to the necessity of more specific legislation on the subject, and in the absence of it has been forced to decide cases not so much from the letter of the law as from its evident spirit and intention. These decisions have not been made in a spirit of judicial legislation, but in an anxious desire and effort, by analogy and otherwise, to arrive at a proper construction of the constitution and laws.” (Blum v. Gaines, 57 Tex. 119, 121.) Viewing the law in the liberal spirit *329 here indicated, it seems to us there is more reason for concluding the legislature intended the homestead in the hands of the surviving husband to be exempt from execution than the contrary.

The constitution (sec. 30, art. IV.) provides that “a homestead, as provided by law, shall be exempt from forced sale under any process of law, and shall not be alienated without the joint consent of husband and wife when that relation exists.” Under this provision the conditions upon which a homestead shall be granted have been left entirely to the legislature. While that body has seen fit to limit the right to initiate a homestead to married persons, and to those who are heads of familes, there seems nothing to prevent its being extended to others who are not in either situation. If it could do this, it could extend it to some classes and not to others. It could provide that a homestead once created should continue under some circumstances, and not under others.

The first section of the act quoted above provides that “ the husband and wife shall be deemed to hold said homestead as joint tenants.” As used in this statute, the word “homestead ” may be defined as meaning not only the property— the real estate — occupied as the home, but also the right to have it exempted from levy and forced sale. In case of -a husband and wife, the homestead is a home that cannot be taken from the occupiers for the debts of either or both of the spouses. It is this “homestead ” that they are to hold as joint tenants. One of the fundamental incidents of a joint tenancy is the right of survivorship. If, then, when the legislature provided that they should hold the homestead as joint tenants, if they'understood at all the meaning of the language used, as we must presume thejr did, they must have meant that the survivor should not only succeed to the property which constituted the-homestead, but also to the right to hold it exempt from forced sale. If not, they would not hold the “homestead” as joint tenants, but merely the property covered by the homestead right.

It will be noticed, further, that the same section also provides that where the property declared upon as a homestead is the separate property of either spouse, and shall remain such until the death of one of the parties, the “ homestead right ” *330 ,in such property shall thereupon cease. From this, upon the principle that what is enumerated excludes what is not, it seems quite clear that the legislature must have intended that in case of community property this “ homestead right ” should not cease upon the death of one of them.

In section 4 it is again the “ homestead ” that upon the death of either spouse is to be set apart as the sole property of the survivor, and it is further provided that, in case there is no surviving spouse nor children, the “property” is to become subject to administration. This shows that the attention of the legislature must have been particularly called to the fact that there was a distinction between the homestead and the property upon which the homestead right rested, and that they did not use those terms indiscriminately.

In Tyrrell v. Baldwin, 78 Cal.

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

Related

In Re Greene
346 B.R. 835 (D. Nevada, 2006)
Jackman v. Nance
857 P.2d 7 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1993)
In re American Business Machines, Inc.
6 B.R. 166 (D. Nevada, 1980)
Meisner v. Hill
138 N.W. 583 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1912)
In re the Estate of Cook
34 Nev. 217 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 P. 6, 22 Nev. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-greer-nev-1895.