Solnar v. Solnar

216 N.W. 288, 205 Iowa 701
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 22, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 N.W. 288 (Solnar v. Solnar) 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
Solnar v. Solnar, 216 N.W. 288, 205 Iowa 701 (iowa 1927).

Opinion

Faville, J.

*702 *701 In 1866, a man and his wife by the name of Yavorsky lived in Iowa City. They occupied certain real estate in said city as a home. The title to this property was in the *702 wife. They bad one daughter, Frances. In January, 1867, Frances married a man named Joseph Solnar. After the marriage, Frances and her husband lived at West Liberty for some time. Thereafter they returned to Iowa City, and subsequently removed to Des Moines. Three children were born of this marriage. One is the plaintiff, Henry; another was a-daughter, Mary, who was never married, and who died in 1909; the third, a' son, Charles, died in 1914, and was survived by his widow and two children. The latter are the defendants in this action. In 1872, said Joseph Solnar left his wife and family in the city of Des Moines, and started for either Cotincil Bluffs or Omaha, and, it is contended by appellees, has never been heard from since. Shortly after Joseph left, Frances returned to her parents’ home at Iowa City, with her three children.

In 1883, while Frances and her children were living with her parents on said premises, they deeded the property to her by warranty deed. The granting clause in said deed contained the following provision:

“These grantors retaining to themselves, however, the tenancy and occupation of said property, to themselves jointly and severally during their lives.’-’

The covenants of said deed are in the usual form of those of a warranty deed, but contain the following clause:

“Except the right of the grantors to occupy said property as long as they live.”

The mother of Frances, who held the legal title to the premises, died the day the deed was executed. The father and Frances and her children stayed on the premises until the father’s death, in 1893. Frances and her children continued in possession of the property thereafter.

Sometime in the nineties, — the exact date does not. appear, ■ — the two sons of Frances, Henry and Charles, were married. Each established a home of his own. The daughter, Mary, was later removed from the home to a hospital, where she died in January of 1909. Frances died on April 22, 1925, intestate.

A claim in behalf of Theresa, the widow of Charles and mother of the two appellees, for care of Frances during the latter years of her life, has been established as a claim against her estate. While this action is in partition between the heirs of *703 Frances, tbe contest in reality centers on tbe question as to wbetber or not tbe property is subject to tbe payment of tbe debts of the decedent, or is exempt therefrom as a homestead.

I. Frances acquired no homestead rights in the premises under her deed until after her father’s death, in 1893. During all of said time, the father occupied the premises under the express reservation in the deed, which gave him the ‘! tenancy and occupation” during his life. The occupation by Frances and her children, with the father, was by his sufferance, but did not give her any homestead right in the property until his death. Therm'e v. Bethenoid, 106 Iowa 697; Roach v. Dance (Ky.), 80 S. W. 1097; Cornish v. Frees, 74 Wis. 490' (43 N. W. 507) ; Massillon Engine & Thresher Co. v. Barrow (Tex.), 231 S. W. 368; 29 Corpus Juris 846.

II. Section 10135, Code of 1924, provides:

‘ ‘ The homestead must embrace the house used as a home by the owner.”

Code Section 10138 provides:

“The owner, husband or wife, may select the homestead and cause it to be platted.”

Code Section 10150 is as follows:

“The homestead of every family, whether owned by the husband or wife, is exempt from judicial sale, where there is no special declaration of statute to the contrary, and such right shall continue in favor of the party to whom it is adjudged by divorce decree during continued personal occupancy by such party. ’ ’

It is to be noticed that, under Code Section 10150, it is the homestead “of every family, whether owned by the husband or wife,” that is exempt from judicial sale.

*704 *703 The title to this property in 1893 was vested in the said Frances. She was in possession of the same as a home, maintaining a family of herself and three children, who were de-pendent upon her for their support. It is a familiar rule that the exemption statutes, and particularly those with regard to homestead rights, are to be liberally construed. The exemption of the homestead is as the homestead of a family, whether it is owned by the husband or the wife. In construing our homestead statute, we have long held that a family, within the meaning of this statute, is “a collective body of persons who live in *704 one bouse, under one bead or management.” Parsons v. Livingston & Kinkead, 11 Iowa 104; Tyson v. Reynolds, 52 Iowa 431; Emerson v. Iowa 311; Fullerton v. Sherrill, 114 Iowa 511; Blair v. Fritz, 162 Iowa 716; Linton v. Crosby, 56 Iowa 386; Armstrong-McClenahan Co. v. Rhoads, 180 Iowa 710; Sheehy v. Scott, 128 Iowa 551; Fox v. Waterloo Nat. Bank, 126 Iowa 481. In tbe latter case, we reviewed tbe authorities, and cited many instances as illustrating the application of tbe rule. In that case, tbe husband and wife had separated, and agreed to live apart. The wife,, with certain of tbe children, left the homestead occupied by the family, and immediately thereafter, an adult daughter abandoned her avocation as a teacher, and went to live with her father at the home. A decree of divorce was subsequently obtained between the father and mother. We held that the father was morally bound to support the adult daughter who kept the home for him, and that the property was the homestead of the father at the time of his death. Leonard, 96

In Armstrong-McClenahan v. Rhoads, supra, we said:

“The husband and father who resides with and supports his wife and children is uniformly held to be the head of a family. The wife, however, under some circumstances may become the head of a family.”,

In the instant case, Frances held the title to the property. She occupied it exclusively as a home for herself and her three children, who were legally dependent upon her for support. Her husband had not been heard of for probably more than twenty years, and if in fact living, his whereabouts were unknown.

It is to be noted that the statute with respect to the homestead differs from the general exemption statute (Section 11763, Code of 1924), with regard to the personal earnings of “the head of a family.” It is “the homestead of every family” that is exempt, and this is true “whether owned by the husband or wife.” Code Section 10150.

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Bluebook (online)
216 N.W. 288, 205 Iowa 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solnar-v-solnar-iowa-1927.