Wildes v. Vanvoorhis

81 Mass. 139
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 Mass. 139 (Wildes v. Vanvoorhis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wildes v. Vanvoorhis, 81 Mass. 139 (Mass. 1860).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is a special writ of entry by the assignee to foreclose a mortgage of real estate situated in Malden in this county. The facts on which the question arises appear by an. agreed statement thereof by counsel, which, with the deeds referred to, constitutes the case.

The first point taken by the defendant is, that, under the homestead law, the mortgage due from Gould to French, dated October 11th 1855, was absolutely void, that nothing passed by it, and that it was a nullity. This construction was insisted on mainly on the authority of the case of Richards v. Chace, 2 Gray, 383.

That case arose upon a former statute of 1851, c. 340, a statute expressing perhaps imperfectly the whole intent of the legislature. The court came to that construction with some reluctance, believing, as they did, that it was probably the purpose of the legislature to exempt a certain limited amount of real estate as homestead, limited by its value, leaving all the residue of the [143]*143owner’s estate to be alienated by sale or mortgage, attachment and levy of execution, as if the homestead act had not been passed. But that act having definitely pointed out how the deed should be taken, in order to create a homestead, or how, after a common conveyance to a householder, he should file a declaration that he held it as a homestead, and then declaring that no conveyance by the husband of any property “ exempted as aforesaid ” should be valid, unless the wife should join therein, the court, taking this in connection with the fact that no means were provided by the act, in the case of sale or mortgage, how the $500 worth should be identified and set apart, felt bound to hold that the terms “ exempted as aforesaid ” described the entire estate so conveyed and declared, even though it might exceed $500 in value.

The statute of 1855, which was passed in April of that year, was in force when the mortgage now under consideration was made. This statute, like the preceding, provided no mode by which the part exempted could be identified and set apart so as to ascertain precisely what part of the estate embraced in the description passed by the deed, and what by force of law was reserved by the exemption, and in that respect was liable to the same exception. But under the statute of 1855, and the acts which have followed, the court are of opinion that the conveyance by Gould to French, in which the wife of the mortgagor joined for the purpose of releasing her dower, was not absolutely void, and at most was voidable only. In many cases where a transaction is declared void in terms by a rule of the common law, or even expressly by statute, where the obvious interest of the rule is to secure and protect the rights of another party, the construction of law is, that it is voidable so far that it shall not operate to defeat or impair those rights. Such deed is not a dead letter; but can be avoided by such persons only, and at such time, and in such manner, as may be necessary to secure those rights. In other respects it has its natural effect. As for instance: A deed to defraud or delay creditors is declared void; but the construction is, that it can be avoided by creditors only and their representatives, but is good against the grantor and hia [144]*144heirs. A deed is made by a tenant in common, granting land by metes and bounds in severalty to a third party, though in quantity and value less than his aliquot part, it is a void grant, because it is injurious to the rights of his co-tenants; but if the grantee can obtain a release of their rights from the co-tenants, such deed is good as against the grantor and his heirs, by way of estoppel, if not by way of grant.

It appears to us that such was the character of the mortgage from Gould and wife to French; it was valid, both by way of grant and estoppel, as to the entire estate embraced in the description, except only the right of homestead; as to the homestead, it was void by force of- the statute, as if that had been specially excepted out of the description. The wife joined in the deed in the usual form for relinquishing dower; and to this extent the deed was binding on her, the mortgagee took the estate free from the incumbrance of dower. But the wife did not join in the general terms of the deed, nor did she annex to her execution any words indicating an intent to relinquish her inchoate right of homestead. In analogy to Catlin v. Ware, 9 Mass. 218, and that class of cases, the signature of the name of the wife and the annexation of her seal, without words indicating her intent, or with words indicating one intent, cannot be construed to hold her as a party beyond the intent thus indicated.

We have spoken of a deed declared void, but held to be voidable only. Is the conveyance of the husband without the wife, in case of homestead, of this character ? We think it is. The sole object of the prohibition is to preserve and secure the homestead right for the householder, his wife and children. Any conveyance which has no tendency to defeat this object is not within the purview of this statute.

Who then is there now, who has any right to set up this statute prohibition to defeat the plaintiff’s right? Not the grantor; he is dead. Not the defendant; because, in the first place, he took his deed from the administratrix, subject to every incumbrance, and this mortgage was an incumbrance, of which he had constructive notice by its registration; in the second place, because he does not claim under the homestead right.

[145]*145Had the defendant been able to show that the deed in question was utterly void, a mere nullity, he might have legally resisted the plaintiff’s demand, simply on the ground of being the defendant, and by the maxim that a plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title, and not by the weakness of the defendant’s.

The widow and children make no opposition; they have made their homestead claim, and had their claim allowed. The heirs at law are estopped by the deed of their ancestor, and the defendant does not claim under them.

But if there still remain any doubt of the result of the case upon the grounds above stated, the court are of opinion that there is another upon which we must come to the same conclusion in deciding this case, being a suit by the mortgagee against the purchaser at the sale made by the administratrix under the usual license. This conclusion is drawn from the St. of 1857, c. 298, which puts the matter, we think, on the true ground. It provides, like the St. of 1855, that no person shall hold as a household exemption to a larger amount than $ 800. It provides in § 12 that a conveyance by the husband without his wife, if of the value of $800, shall not be invalid, but shall transfer the estate, subject to the right of dower and right of homestead. It provides a simple and easy mode in § 14, by which the party entitled to a homestead may have the same appraised and set off; and in like manner it directs how the person entitled to the excess over $800 may have his share separated and set off. It directs in § 16 similar proceedings, when the householder goes through proceedings in insolvency, to secure the homestead to the debtor, his wife and children, and the excess, if any, to the creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Mass. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wildes-v-vanvoorhis-mass-1860.