Zanone v. Sprague

116 P. 989, 16 Cal. App. 333, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 131
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 839.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 116 P. 989 (Zanone v. Sprague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zanone v. Sprague, 116 P. 989, 16 Cal. App. 333, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 131 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain real property situated in the city of San Francisco.

The court granted defendant’s motion for a nonsuit and rendered and caused to be entered judgment accordingly. The appeal here is by the plaintiff from said judgment.

There is no dispute as to the important facts, which are: Alfred Goad and plaintiff’s intestate, Catherine A. Powers, intermarried in the month of July, 1869.

The real estate in dispute was the separate property of said Alfred Goad, it having been devised to him by his father, Samuel Goad, prior to his said marriage to plaintiff’s intestate.

On the sixth day of January, 1870, Alfred Goad filed with the county recorder of the city and county of San Francisco a declaration of homestead on said property. In the declaration so filed it was stated that the family of the declarant consisted of himself and wife (plaintiff’s intestate), and that, at the time of the filing of said declaration, they were residing on the premises upon which the declaration of homestead was so filed.

On the fourteenth day of April, 1881, Alfred Goad was, by the superior court in and for the city and county of San Francisco, granted a decree of divorce from plaintiff’s intes *336 tate. On the twelfth day of October, 1890, Alfred Coad and Jane Mary Sprague, defendant’s intestate, intermarried and remained husband and wife up to the time of said Goad’s death, which occurred on the thirteenth day of April, 1906.

Coad and defendant’s intestate, as husband and wife, resided on the premises in dispute at the time of his death.

Subsequently to the death of Coad, his widow married John R. Sprague, the marriage ceremony having been performed on the twenty-ninth day of September, 1907.

After the trial of this action, both Catherine A. Powers and Jane M. Sprague died intestate, and the plaintiff and the defendant were duly appointed administratrix and administrator, respectively, of the estates of the deceased women, and were thereupon substituted as parties plaintiff and defendant, respectively, to this action.

The claim of the plaintiff is that her intestate, Catherine A. Powers (mother of plaintiff by Alfred Coad), is the owner in fee of the premises in controversy by reason of the declaration of homestead filed thereon by Alfred Coad during their coverture (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1474), said homestead never having been abandoned during the life of said Coad by the mode prescribed by law. (Civ. Code, sec. 1243.)

The contention of the defendant is: 1. That no valid homestead was ever declared and filed on the premises; 2. That, assuming that there was a homestead declared and filed on the premises according to the requirements of the law (Civ. Code, secs. 1263, 1264), the interest of Catherine Powers therein terminated with the decree dissolving the marriage relation between her and Coad.

The decree of divorce is absolutely silent as to the homestead or other property, and, manifestly, in such case, if either or both of the propositions contended for by the defendant are maintainable, Catherine Powers had no interest of whatsoever kind or nature in the property in dispute at the time of the commencement of this action.

We are of opinion that the second proposition urged by defendant, viz., that whatever interest in or rights under the purported homestead acquired by plaintiff’s intestate were lost upon the entry of the decree granting Coad a divorce from her, is sound and must be sustained. It will, therefore, not be necessary to examine and decide the question *337 whether the attempt to impress the disputed property with the character of a homestead was successful or futile.

“The policy of homestead laws,” says Waples, in his work on “Homestead and Exemption,” page 29, “is the conservation of homes for the good of the state; the mischief to be prevented by those laws is the breaking up of families and homes to the general injury of society and of the state; the remedy provided is the exemption of occupied family homes from the hammer of the executioner,” and, therefore, as to “homestead statutes, liberal construction is the rule so far as concerns exemptions.” (Id.) In other words, homestead statutes are not designed to screen debtors or to protect them againsjt the performance of their just obligations, but to provide for the conservation of homes in the interest of the general welfare and to that end to protect homes against the business misfortunes or the improvidence of heads of families. While homestead rights are purely creatures of the legislature, they áre, nevertheless, as stated, to be given a liberal construction in order to fully effectuate their beneficent purposes. With this rule in view, we shall consider the respective contentions of the parties to this controversy.

As the property involved here is of the separate estate of Goad, it is manifest, as will be seen, that the only way by which plaintiff’s intestate could have retained any interest in the homestead in question, after the divorce was granted, was by an assignment of said homestead to her by the court for a “limited period” at the time the decree granting the divorce was rendered and entered. (Civ. Code, sec. 146, subd. 4.) Said subdivision of said section provides that, upon the dissolution of the marriage by the decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, in case the homestead has been selected from the separate property of either, the same “shall be assigned to the former owner of such property, subject to the power of the court to assign it for a limited period to the innocent party.”

As we have seen, the decree of divorce is silent as to the homestead, and it is, therefore, to be presumed that the court, at the time of granting the divorce, made no order with reference to said homestead, having assigned it neither to the “former owner” of the property (Goad) nor to the wife “for a limited period.” (Brady v. Kreuger, 8 S. D. *338 464, [59 Am. St. Rep. 771, 775, 66 N. W. 1083].) Indeed, from the fact that Goad was the plaintiff in said action, and from the further fact that plaintiff’s intestate made no appearance therein, but allowed the proofs to be heard and the judgment to be entered upon her default, it may be assumed that the evidence must have disclosed that she did not come within the description of the party, as set forth in that section, to whom a trial court is authorized, in such case, to assign a homestead carved out of the separate property of the other spouse “for a limited period.” At any rate, it is very evident that the circumstances developed at the hearing of the suit for divorce were not, in the judgment of the court hearing said action, such as to justify an order awarding the homestead, “for a limited period,” to plaintiff’s intestate.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P. 989, 16 Cal. App. 333, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zanone-v-sprague-calctapp-1911.