Watson v. Hurlburt

170 P. 541, 87 Or. 297, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 282
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 170 P. 541 (Watson v. Hurlburt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Hurlburt, 170 P. 541, 87 Or. 297, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 282 (Or. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bean

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. Counsel for the defendants contend that the real property is not exempt as a homestead under the statute, except to the amount of $1,500 in value, and that the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to defendants’ further and separate answer. Counsel for plaintiffs submit that a tract of land in a city, which does not exceed in area one city lot, having improvements thereon, although it exceeds in value $1,500, is exempt. The case involves the construction of the homestead exemption law. The title of the act reads:

“An Act to exempt homesteads from attachment and judicial sale”: Sess. Laws 1893, p. 93.

The first two sections are as follows:

Section 221, L. O. L. “Homesteads Exempt. Must be Actual Abode. The homestead of any family shall be exempt from judicial sale for the satisfaction of any judgment hereafter obtained. Such homestead must [301]*301be the actual abode of, and owned by such family, or some member thereof.”
Section 222, L. O. L. “Extent oe Homestead Exemption. Such homestead shall not exceed $1,500 in value, nor exceed one hundred and sixty acres in extent, if not located in town or city laid off into blocks and lots; if located in any such town or city, then it shall not exceed one block; but in no instance shall such homestead be reduced to less than twenty acres nor one lot, regardless of value.”

The first section decrees, without qualification, that the homestead which is the actual abode of and owned by a family or some member thereof shall be exempt. Section 2 limits the extent of the exemption. The closing words of this section are a distinct and unqualified command that in no instance shall a homestead be reduced to less than twenty acres nor one lot, regardless of value. Thus far the act establishes the substantive right and the extent thereof. Griving to each part of the act its appropriate meaning so that each section will perform the office intended, there is no provision in conflict with the clause referred to. Sections 224 and 225, L. O. L., relate to the procedure to secure and confirm the right previously granted. Section 224 gives directions, when a levy is made upon such homestead, for notice to the officer that the owner claims the premises as a homestead, whereupon such officer shall notify the creditor. Provision is then made that “if such homestead shall exceed the minimum in this act,” that is, if the area of the homestead exceeds twenty acres of land or one city or town lot, then if the creditor “deem it of greater value than $1,500,” he may proceed under either of the latter sections and direct the sheriff to select three disinterested householders to appraise such homestead, commencing with the twenty acres or lot upon which the dwelling [302]*302is located, appraising such lot or twenty acres separately,

“and if the same exceed $1,500, then the sheriff shall proceed to sell all in excess of $1,500 by lots or smallest legal subdivisions, offering them in the order directed by the judgment debtor, if he chooses to direct; otherwise, he shall sell the same as aforesaid, so as to leave the homestead as compact as possible.”

The directions contained in the latter section are somewhat involved and tend to obscure the meaning of the other part of the act. "When we notice that the conditions upon which the provisions for an appraisement and sale are made applicable are that “if such homestead shall exceed the minimum in this act, and he deem it of greater value than $1,500,” it is evident that the language of Sections 224 and 225 does not overcome the plain and unambiguous provision of Section 222, that “in no instance shall such homestead be reduced to less than twenty acres nor one lot, regardless of value.” Section 225 merely provides for an alternative method of procedure based upon the same conditions as to area and value as prescribed in Section 224. In the event that a homestead exceeds the defined limit of extent and value and such excess cannot be practicably sold separately, the whole may be sold, adding. $1,500 to the lien and that amount of money be exempt. The function of Sections 224 and 225 is to provide a means of procedure for a creditor to avail himself of the benefit of the excess when, and only when, the homestead claimed exceeds in area and also in value the limit prescribed by Section 222. The former two sections were not intended to limit or declare the right conferred by the latter. It was obviously the primary legislative intent, as the title of the act suggests (see 36 Cyc. 1134), to grant an ex[303]*303emption of the home of the debtor, to the extent of twenty acres of land, or one town lot, together with a dwelling-house thereon, regardless of the value of the property. Such homestead may be greater in extent when the same does not exceed $1,500 in value or 160 acres of land or one block: In re Barde, 225 Fed. 715 (140 C. C. A. 589). In the latter case the statute in question was construed by Judge Bean of the United States District Court and by the Circuit Court of Appeals. The able opinion of the latter court was written by District Judge Van Fleet. Our investigation leads to the same determination. For more than twelve years the imperative of the lawmakers, which leaves no option, has remained in the latter part of Section 222 without change. Any hardship or inequality which may be worked by the enforcement thereof must be prevented by legislative command. In the case at bar the homestead claimed does not exceed one lot or extend beyond the limit defined in Section 222; therefore, the incongruous provisions of the succeeding sections are not directly involved. There is no excess to be sold. There was no error in sustaining the demurrer.

2, 3. It is contended on behalf of defendants that the homestead in question does not constitute only one lot within the meaning of the statute and is not exempt under any construction of the law. This claim is made for the reason that the boundaries of the homestead are not identical with the lines of the lots; or that the premises are not within the limits of a single lot. The homestead claimed is approximately adjacent halves of lots 4 and 5 in block 1 of Fordham Addition to the City of Portland, which addition consists of two blocks. These are irregular in shape and are not of uniform size; so also are the lots. The land claimed by plain[304]*304tiffs is 50 feet in width on one street and 50.12 on another, the same as the lots in that part of the block. It is not quite rectangular, the length of the sides varying slightly. Lots 4 and 5 are of about an average size. It may be fairly said that the homestead does not exceed one lot, taking as a standard the other lots in the Addition. The statute does not require that the homestead shall constitute but one lot. “The actual abode” of the family is the thing that is exempted. The extent or amount thereof “shall not exceed one block; but in no instance shall such homestead be reduced to less than twenty acres nor one lot.” The homestead in question consists of one lot within the meaning of the statute: 13 E. C. L., p. 576, § 39. Homestead laws are remedial in their nature and according to the weight of authority should be liberally construed so as to effect the purpose of the statute: 21 Cyc. 461; 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), p. 533; 13 E. C. L., p. 547, § 8.

4, 5.

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Bluebook (online)
170 P. 541, 87 Or. 297, 1918 Ore. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-hurlburt-or-1918.