Whitford v. Kinzel

153 N.W. 620, 98 Neb. 601, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 277
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1915
DocketNo. 18765
StatusPublished

This text of 153 N.W. 620 (Whitford v. Kinzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitford v. Kinzel, 153 N.W. 620, 98 Neb. 601, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 277 (Neb. 1915).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

This is the second appeal in this case, and the third time that it has been before us for consideration. A statement of the issues and of the facts, as disclosed by the record of the first hearing in the district court, will be found in our opinions on the hearing and rehearing of the former appeal. 90 Neb. 573, and 92 Neb. 373. At the hearing of the former appeal we held that the evidence was insufficient to show that at the time Mrs. Browand left Nebraska she was insane or so unsound or unbalanced mentally that she was not competent to understand the nature and import of what she was doing, but that it was sufficient to show that she voluntarily left her husband and abandoned her home and any right of homestead that she may have had in the land in suit, with no intention of ever return[602]*602ing or of ever again asserting those rights. On the rehearing we adhered to our former holding as to the insufficiency of the evidence to show Mrs. Browand’s mental incapacity to understand the nature and import of what she was doing, but receded from our former holding that the evidence was sufficient to show that she voluntarily left her husband and abandoned her home, etc. The reason for receding from that part of our former holding will be found in the second paragraph of the syllabus in the opinion on rehearing, where it is held: “All presumptions are in favor of the preservation of the homestead, and, when it is sought to show its abandonment, the burden of proof rests upon the person who attacks the homestead interest.” In the opinion we held that defendants had not sustained that burden. The judgment of the district court having been in favor of the defendants, it was reversed and remanded for further proceedings. There was a second hearing in the district court, which resulted as before, and plaintiff again appeals.

Counsel for plaintiff in their brief say: “The sole question therefore, in the case, is this: ' Have the defendants established by a preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Browand. abandoned her homestead?” We agree with counsel in this statement, and shall consider only that question.

The evidence taken at the first trial in the district court was reoffered at the second trial, and is again before us. It comprises the first 293 pages of the bill of exceptions. The remainder of the bill covers the evidence taken at the second trial. We deem it unnecessary to again refer to the testimony taken at the first trial, more than to say that it then was considered sufficient by three members of the court to establish such abandonment. It is only necessary, therefore, to review the additional evidence furnished at the second trial for the purpose of determining whether or not, when added to the testimony at the first trial, it is sufficient to sustain the burden cast upon the defendants by our second opinion on the first appeal. Before entering upon a consideration of that testimony, we [603]*603call attention to one fact which was left more dr less in doubt by the record on the first appeal, viz., whether Mr. and Mrs. Browand, at the time of leaving the state, sold off all of their goods and household effects, or whether they stored them, or a considerable portion of them, in town, and Mr. Browand, on a subsequent visit to the state, sold the same. This matter is made clear at the second trial. The evidence now leaves no room for reasonable doubt that before Mr. and Mrs. Browand left the state, or left the land, they had a sale and sold all of their personal effects, including their household furniture, beds, bedding, etc.

The only new testimony offered by plaintiff as to Mrs. Browand’s intention to return is the testimony of relatives in Indiana, to the effect that after she had left Nebraska and gone to Indiana, and some weeks prior to her commitment to an insane asylum, and at a time when they thought she was insane, she said she wanted to go home to Nebraska, and tried to borrow money from them to go. As against that, a number of new witnesses were introduced by the defendants, to whose testimony we will briefly refer.

J. E. Bowden testified that he lived in the neighborhood where the Browands lived, and attended the auction sale had by the Browands when they were about to leave Nebraska; that he saw both Mr. and Mrs. Browand there; that Mrs. Browand was about the house with the other ladies, and that he noticed nothing out of the ordinary in her conduct; that they sold the property there on the farm, the same as other persons did when leaving. On recall he testified that, when he arrived at the sale, “they were selling furniture on the east side of the house. * * * They were selling quite a lot and did after I came there.”

P. H. King testified that he attended the auction sale; that they were selling all their goods at that sale, the same as other people did when they quit farming; that it was a cold day, and he was in the house a good deal, and talked with Mrs. Browand; that she was looking after the wants [604]*604of the people in the house and looking after things generally.

Peter Hanson attended the sale. He testified that they were selling out everything on the place.

A. R. Stewart attended the sale. He testified that they were selling the stuff they had on the farm; that it looked like a sale for removal from the farm.

A. E. Behlers testified that he remembered the sale, and of seeing the sale bills that had been posted up; that he herded sheep near the Browand farm, and would go to their well for drinking water; that he knew Mrs. Browand, and talked with her frequently, and did not notice anything out of the ordinary; that after the sale the Browands went away.

A. Emley was an old friend and neighbor of the Browands. He stated that they often exchanged visits; that Mrs. Browand’s mental condition seemed good.

James Coleman, 40 years old at the time of the trial, testified that he went to live with the Browands when he was nine years old, with the understanding that they were to adopt him; that Mrs. Browand went to Indiana in 1885, and during her absence of about a month he and Mr. Brow- and were alone on the farm; that in the spring of 1886 the Browands decided to leave the farm; that they had a sale and sold their furniture and stock and implements at auction; that he tacked up some of the sale bills; that Mrs. Browand was there at the time, and told him more than once that they were going to leave Nebraska for good; that the Browands were talking, for five or six months before they left, about going back to Indiana; that they talked about selling the stock and the farm, but finally decided to rent; that they both stated several times that their intentions were to go there to stay.

Moses Whitcomb testified that he was an old acquaintance and friend of the Browands; that he knew Mrs. Browand in Indiana when she was a little girl; that after they came to Nebraska he visited at their home; that he had a talk with Mrs. Browand before the Browands left for Indiana; he thinks this talk was in the fall of 1884; [605]*605that he had quite a talk with her; that Mr. Browand was out milking the cows, and Mrs. Browand came out and sat down on the bench beside him. “I says, ‘Mrs. Browand, seems to me that you’ve quit milking the cows.’ She says, ‘Yes, sir; I have.’ ‘Well,’ she says, ‘that ends it, Mose,’ and she says, ‘That ends it, Mose,’ designating me. ‘I am going to go home just as soon as I can and stay with my mother.’ He came up then, and as a matter of course there was no more talking about it.”

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Related

Whitford v. Kinzel
133 N.W. 1124 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1912)
Whitford v. Kinzel
138 N.W. 597 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 620, 98 Neb. 601, 1915 Neb. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitford-v-kinzel-neb-1915.