Wilmoth v. Gossett

76 S.W. 1073, 71 Ark. 594, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 7, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 76 S.W. 1073 (Wilmoth v. Gossett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmoth v. Gossett, 76 S.W. 1073, 71 Ark. 594, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 99 (Ark. 1903).

Opinion

Bunn, C. J.

In the Boone county court, at its October term, 1900, Yesta Wilmoth, Harriett Brown, T. H. Gossett, Louisa Murry, Mattie Austin, Mary Childers, and the children and heirs at law of Sarah Marshall, deceased, children and grandchildren of William Gossett, deceased, filed their ex parte petition, reciting that their said ancestor had died intestate about the 8th day of July, 1900, leaving surviving him his widow, Mary Ann Gossett and the petitioners, and seized and possessed of about 187 acres of land near the town of Harrison in said county of Boone, describing the same; that his widow, the said Mary Ann Gossett, at the time of her said husband’s death, owned in her own right 160 acres of land, and a life estate in 120 acres more, all in said county, and the last named near the town of Harrison. Prayer that commissioners be appointed and directed to lay off and set apart dower' in said lands of her deceased husband, and the same was accordingly done, and the commissioners were ordered to report their action at the next term of said court.

On a subsequent day in said October term, Mary Ann Gossett, the widow of William Gossett, appeared in said court, and asked to be made, and was made, a party defendant to said proceeding, and filed her separate answer. Hpon the petition and answer the probate court held that said respondent was not entitled to the benefit of a homestead in her deceased husband’s land occupied by him and herself and family at the time of his death and for several years previously thereto, but that she was entitled to dower in her husband’s lands; and commissioners were appointed and directed in accordance with the prayer of the petition; and the said Mary Ann Gossett duly and in due time took an appeal from said judgment to the Boone county circuit court, where, at its January term, 1901, the judgment of the probate court was reversed, the court holding that she was entitled to the benefits of the homestead left by her deceased husband, and thereupon directing dower to be set apart to her in all the lands of her deceased husband, including those claimed by her as a homestead. From this judgment the petitioner duly and in due time appealed to this court.

The cause was heard in the circuit court on the following agreed statement of facts, to-wit: “We, the undersigned, attorneys for the plaintiffs, as well as the attorneys for the defendant, hereby agree that William Gossett died seized and possessed of the lands mentioned in the transcript; that Mary Ann Gossett was his widow; that he left no minor heirs; that they resided on said land at the time of his death, and for several years prior thereto, as a homestead, and she has not since abandoned it; that the land is contiguous, and worth not exceeding $2500; that the said Mary Ann Gossett owned a life estate in one hundred and twenty acres of land north of Harrison, on which she and said William Gossett had temporarily resided four or five years prior to the time they moved on the homestead on which he died; that said land in which she owned a life estate had dwelling and outhouses, and that most of the land was in cultivation, and it was a place of considerable value, not exceeding $2,400; that, in addition to this, the said Mary Ann Gossett owned 160 acres of land in Boone county, Arkansas, on which there was a dwelling and 35 acres in cultivation; that the last-named place she owned in her own right, having fee-simple title thereto.”

The counsel for appellants contend that the widow, in the state of case made out by the agreed statement of facts, is not entitled to the privilege of the homestead left by the husband, contending that, as the widow had lands in said county in her own right, and more than sufficient to constitute a homestead in law, a part of which she and her said husband had occupied as their homestead in the beginning of their married life, she was barred from her claim by the provisions of section 6, article 9, of the Constitution of 1874.

The only question addressed to us for determination is whether the ownership of lands in her own right, and upon which sjie and her husband lived for some years in their early married life, bars her claim of homestead in his lands, which they had occupied as a homestead for many years next preceding and up to his death.

In either case, of homestead in the wife or in the husband, the questions of dedication, occupation, and abandonment are important to be considered. In the case of the husband he can not be made to assert a homestead right against his will. There is no good reason for the application of a different rule in the case of the wife, for what is to be considered the homestead of any one depends primarily upon his or her intention in regard thereto, there being no homestead growing out of construction merely; all depending upon the facts in each ease, to prove the intention of the owner or occupier of the land.

According to the agreed statement of facts, which is the evidence in this case, at one time immediately succeeding their marriage, they lived as husband and wife upon the portion of the wife’s land in which she owned only a life estate, the 120 acres described in the pleadings, where there were buildings and outhouses, usually making up to a greater or less extent the comforts and' conveniences of a home.

Section 3, art. 9, of the Constitution, reads thus: “The homestead of any resident of this state, who is married or the head of a family, shall not be subject to the lien of auy Judgment or decree of any court or sale under execution or other process thereon,” etc. In construing the language of this section, this court, in Thompson v. King, 54 Ark. 11, said: The object of this section “is to protect the home of the married and the family against seizure or sale, and no reason can be advanced why the-land of the wife occupied as the home of the husband and his family should not be protected as well as the land of the husband should be when it is the homestead.” There is nothing, however, in the books, so far as we have been able to discover, which gives a homestead right to the wife, even on her own land, when she is not occupying the same as such, but is living on land with her husband belonging to and selected by him -as the family homestead. It is said also in the decision cited that “the homestead is intended for the benefit of the family.” It can not, therefore, be made use of to disrupt and disorganize the family, as would be the case where the homestead of the wife was in one place and that of the husband in another. There can not be two homesteads for this legal unity at one and the same time. Thompson, Homesteads, § 2251.

Moreover, it is necessarily implied in the language of that decision that there must be a joint occupancy of the husband and wife to fix the character of a homestead upon the wife’s land. It follows that the homestead ceases when the hugband no longer resides in the home on the wife’s land, but has selected a homestead on his own land' — -has abandoned the homestead on the wife’s land. The husband’s home must be the wife’s; she must follow him, and not the reverse, is the legal status. He is the controlling spirit in this legal unity, and has a right to select, and also to abandon, the home at his will.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W. 1073, 71 Ark. 594, 1903 Ark. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmoth-v-gossett-ark-1903.