Wilkinson v. Merrill

12 S.E. 1015, 87 Va. 513, 1891 Va. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 19, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 12 S.E. 1015 (Wilkinson v. Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkinson v. Merrill, 12 S.E. 1015, 87 Va. 513, 1891 Va. LEXIS 102 (Va. 1891).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was a householder in the city of Alexandria, who, being indebted, in May, 1883, in a suit in a court of competent jurisdiction, had had set apart to him as a homestead the house and lot situated in the said city, where he resided, and which said house and lot is in controversy here.

At this time the family of the said householder consisted of [514]*514himself and his little grandson, a boy of tender years, being nine or ten years of age, and a son who was of age and worked out on his own account, but received occasional aid, as need required, from his said father.

In 1884 the appellee, John M. Truslow, one of his creditors, to whom 'he owed about two hundred dollars, enticed the child with him down the Potomac river on an excursion with an order known as the “Ped Men,” and on the return to the city at night the child was mysteriously drowned, and his body recovered from the river some days afterwards. No account and no report of this was made by Truslow to the child’s mother, who did not live with the grandfather, nor to the grandfather (the appellant), and the mother knew nothing of the little boy’s death until his body was found in the river. The boy’s grandfather did not know of the death, nor of the whereabouts of the child, for a day or two afterwards, when he “ was running around and did not know where he was,” as he says, until he heard at the house of the witness, Q,uinn; that the appellee, Truslow, had been there bragging that the child was out of the way, saying: “The old rascal is gone up now; he can’t claim the homestead now; Johnny is gone; he was drowned last night.” That he had taken the child down there, and played around the ground with him, and bought him some things, and was so drunk coming home that he could not notice him coming home on the boat; that he was too drunk to notice him. The grandfather then hurried to the mother, who went to the river and then to Truslow’s house and begged to see him, but was refused an audience by Truslow, who said his wife would not let him come out.

The evidence shows that on the day -when the boy was enticed away, .he had gone to his mother’s to assist her about making a move; that Truslow filled the child’s mind with excitement by vivid descriptions of the pleasures in anticipation, and promised his mother to take especial care of him, and carried him against his grandfather’s wishes and without' [515]*515his consent; that when Truslow, who was a creditor in the ■■small amount named, found that the property in question had been set apart as a homestead to the appellant, and that the payment of his debt was thus postponed, that he became greatly enraged, and abused the appellant often and violently, ■and beat him severely; and often said that but for the boy the grandfather would have no family, and he would lose his right of homestead; and threatened on the day he beat the old grandfather to kill, the child, applying to the unoffending obstacle to tbe fulfillment of his desire to collect his debt the vilest epithets; that he subsequently sought the mother, and offered money to iler for the possession of the child. Failing in this, he got possession temporarily of the boy in the manner and with the result stated.

The child being thus disposed of, and the way believed to be clear, the bill was filed setting forth the setting apart of the homestead to the defendant, and the subsequent death of the only other member of his family besides himself, and praying for a sale of the homestead.

The defendant demurred to the bill, but the court overruled the demurrer, and he answered in the manner as detailed above. The cause was referred to a commissioner for examination and report, and depositions were taken; and the commissioner returned the depositions, and reported that in his •opinion the defendant was not entitled to claim his homestead in the real estate in the bill mentioned, because he was not a householder and head of a family.

At the hearing the circuit court overruled all exceptions to the commissioner’s report, confirmed the same in all respects, and decreed the sale of the homestead. From which decree the said appellant, Wilkinson, appealed to this court.

The only question we are called upon to decide is, whether this homestead exemption, which had, in due form of law, been set apart to this householder, was ended and determined by the death of his little grandson. To determine this ques[516]*516tion, which is of first impression in this court, we will consider the question first in the light of the constitutional provision, which secures a homestead exemption to every householder or head of a family.

Section 1 of Article XI of the Constitution of Virginia provides that "every householder or head of a family shall be entitled,” &c., to this homestead exemption. Section 5 provides that the general assembly shall prescribe the manner and on what conditions the said householder or head of a family shall set apart and hold for himself and family the homestead exemption, &c. But that this section shall not be construed as authorizing the general assembly to defeat or impair the benefit intended to be conferred by the provisions of this article.

And section 7 provides that “ the provisions of this article shall be construed liberally, to the end that all the intents thereof may be fully and perfectly carried out.”

We have said that this is a question whether the homestead, having been set apart in due course to a householder, is determined by the death of all the members of his family, except himself, and that it is, as such, of first impression in this court.

In the case of Calhoun v. Williams, 32 Gratt., 18, the question was, whether an unmarried man who had no family, was entitled to have the homestead set apart to him.

Lindsay v. Murphy, 76 Va., p. 428, was as to the right of a householder, who had removed from the State, to hold the property set apart as a homestead, and it was decided that the provision was intended to apply tó and did apply only to citizens of this State.

In Shipe, Cloud & Co. v. Repass, 28 Gratt., 734, it was held that when a conveyance was set aside as fraudulent, the grantor could claim the homestead exemption as against creditors in the land, or in the proceeds of the sale thereof; [517]*517and so in Boynton v. McNeal, 31 Gratt , 459; Marshall v. Sears, 79 V. R., 49; Hatcher v. Crews, 83 Va., 371.

In the case of Kennerley v. Swartz & Son, 83 Va., 704, it was held that when a judgment had become a lien on the land before the owner was entitled to a homestead, that such a lien was a security within the meaning of the 3rd section of Article XI of the Constitution, and was paramount to the claim of homestead subsequently made.

Scott v. Cheatham, 78 Va. R., 82, was concerning the waiver of the homestead, and the proper order in which liens should be satisfied when there was a waiver as to some creditors and not as to others. See also Strange v. Strange, 76 Va., 240.

Burke v. Jenkins, 84 Va.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E. 1015, 87 Va. 513, 1891 Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-merrill-va-1891.