Tillotson v. Millard

82 Am. Dec. 112, 7 Minn. 513
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 82 Am. Dec. 112 (Tillotson v. Millard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillotson v. Millard, 82 Am. Dec. 112, 7 Minn. 513 (Mich. 1862).

Opinion

By the, Gov/rt

Atwateb, J.

The word homestead in ordinary use has a popular and well understood meaning, which may be sufficiently accurately defined as the place of residence of the family. That is the prominent idea connected with the use of the word, a dwelling house being inseparably associated with the meaning of the word, in which the family of the owner resides, and connected. therewith a greater or less quantity of land. There can be no doubt but the Legislature in the exemption act have used the word in its ordinary acceptation, and have not intended it should receive any restricted or technical signification, if indeed any such it has. The language of the act of 1858, (which was in force at the time the judgment herein specified was obtained,) seems to assume, as a matter of course, that a dwelling house is a constituent and indispensable part of the homestead. While the popular idea attached to the word homestead, includes a dwelling house as an indispensable part, as above stated, it includes a certain, but no definite quantity pf land, and one purpose of sec. 92, p. 569, Comp. Stat., was to fix a definite limit to the quantity of land which, with the dwelling house, should constitute the homestead.

The homestead then, which the statute exempts from sale on execution, is, (in this case,) eighty acres of land, with the dwelling house thereon', and its appurtenances, owned and occupied by any resident of this State. It is claimed by the Appellant that actual residence upon the premises is not necessary to entitle a debtor to his privilege of exemption; and that the word “occupied,” as used in the statute, means “ use ■ — tenure—possession.” That such is the frequent meaning of the word may be conceded, but we cannot think that such is its meaning as used in this statute. The premises are to be occupied as and for the purpose of a homestead, as is naani-[519]*519fest from tbe connection in which the term is nsed. The object of the statute was to protect the debtor and his family in the enjoyment of a home, and not to give him the use of a certain quantity of land and dwelling house for any other purpose. To call the premises the homestead of the debtor and his family, when the debtor resides elsewhere, and rents or leaves the premises vacant, would be a misnomer — a use of language never contemplated by the legislature. Substantially the same views are expressed in Folsom vs. Carli, 5 Minn., 333, and after further argument and consideration, we see no reason to change the views there expressed, as to the necessity of the occupancy of the homestead as a residence, by the debtor and his family, in order to entitle him to the exemption provided by statute.

The act of 1851, (Rev. Stat., p. 363, see. 93) exempted from sale on execution a homestead, “ that is to say, the land and buildings thereon, occupied as a residence and owned by the debtor, he or she being a householder, to the value of one thousand dollars.” The repealing act of 1858 has changed this language, using instead the phrase “occupied by any resident of this State.” This language, it may be admitted, is less explicit in fixing the residence of the debtor upon the exempt premises, and the objection that by the omission of these words the Legislature intended to change the rule as to the residence, would have much force were this the only marked change in the act of 1858, as stated by the counsel for the-'Appellants. But the important change contemplated by the last named act, was to substitute a definite quantity of land from exemption, irrespective of value, instead of an amount limited to the value of one thousand dollars. The language employed will not justify the construction that the Legislature intended to go farther than this and dispense with a residence upon the premises. It is not necessary to adopt the opposite construction, in order to give effect to the clause in section 92, “ to be selected by the owner thereof.” Where the land connected with, the dwelling house and residence of the debtor amounts to more than eighty acres, the excess is liable to execution, and some method must be adopted for reaching it. The statute gives the debtor the right to select [520]*520Ms eighty, and does not allow the Plaintiff in the execution or any other party than the debtor, to say where such excess shall be taken. Or, it may be, that where the debtor owned two dwelling houses, situated on two separate tracts of land, he would be permitted to select between them.

That in the opinion at least of the Legislature of 1860, the act of 1858 did not authorize the debtor to remore from the premises, is manifest from the fact that during the session .of that year the Legislature passed an act expressly authorizing the debtor to remove from the premises without rendering them liable to sale on execution.

The judgment upon which the premises in question were sold, was obtained in December, 1858. By sec. 77 Comp. Stat.,p. 566, that judgment became a lien on all the real property of the judgment debtor in the county owned by him at the time of the judgment, or afterwards acquired. The Court had occasion in Folsom vs. Carli, above cited, to give a construction to this statute, and there held that the lien attached to the homestead owned and occupied by the debtor as a residence, and that the exemption of the homestead was only an exemption from sale on execution, while occupied by the debtor or his family, but did not affect the lien of the judgment;

But it is claimed that the case of the Plaintiff comes within the act approved March 10, 1860, (Sess. Laws 1860, p. 286)-This act provides, “ that the owner of a homestead under the laws of this State may remove therefrom, or sell and convey the same, and such removal or sale and conveyance shall not render such homestead liable or subject to forced sale on execution or other process hereafter issued on any judgment or decree of any Court in this State or of the District Court of the United States for the State of Minnesota against such owner; nor shall any judgment or decree of any such Court be a lien on such homestead for any purpose whatever.”

It is admitted by the case that the premises were owned and occupied by the Plaintiff as a homestead prior to the 2d day of April, 1860, and that upon said day he removed with his family from said premises to Chatfield, in said county, where he has ever since resided with his family. Conse[521]*521quently, if the act be constitutional as applied to judgments obtained previous to its passage, the premises of the Plaintiff, notwithstanding his removal therefrom, were not subject to sale on execution.

The judgment creditor Millard, upon the docketing of Ms judgment, obtained a lien upon the premises in question. He had thereby the right to sell these premises upon the happening of a certain contingency, to wit, when the premises ceased to be occupied by the debtor or his family as a homestead. This right was perfected in the Defendant Millard, when the judgment was docketed, was then vested in him, without any further act to be done on his part. It was a valuable right, at least to some extent, and acquired by the use of the means allowed by law, and I do not think the legislature could lawfully deprive him of the power to exercise it, by any act passed subsequent to its acquisition. It has been held to be within the legitimate scope of legislative action to extend the time of redemption on the sale of mortgaged premises beyond the limit existing at the time the contract was made.

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Bluebook (online)
82 Am. Dec. 112, 7 Minn. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillotson-v-millard-minn-1862.