Riley v. Pehl
Riley v. Pehl
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, C. J. and Norton, J. concurring.
This is an action to recover the possession of two village lots, claimed by the defendants as a homestead. The wife filed her declaration as a sole trader on the fifth day of December, 1859, and on the second day of August, 1860, the plaintiff commenced an action against her, as such sole trader, and her husband, in which the property claimed as a homestead was attached. He afterward obtained judgment in the action, on which an execution duly issued, under which the property was sold and purchased by the plaintiff on the nineteenth day of January, 1861, and in due time he received a deed from the Sheriff therefor. Notice of the homestead claim appears to have been served on the Sheriff after the levy under the execution, and before the sale of the property. On the sixteenth day of February, and after the Sheriff’s sale, the wife filed a declaration of homestead in the Recorder’s office. The defendants had occupied the premises as a homestead for some time prior to any of these dates, and have so continued to occupy them ever since. The Court found for the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered accordingly, from which the defendants appeal.
The homestead right in this case was acquired by the defendants
The respondent insists that the premises are the separate property of the wife, and therefore liable to be sold on execution for her debts, and no homestead claim can be established thereon. It appears that after the marriage these lots were conveyed to the husband by two separate deeds made at different times; but the same grantors, on the sixteenth day of July, 1859, the date of the last deed, also made a quitclaim deed to the wife for the same lots for the consideration of fifty dollars. She also filed in the Recorder’s office an inventory of her separate property, dated December 5th, 1859, including the premises in controversy. The conveyance to her, being a deed of purchase and not of gift, did not constitute it separate property, but it was the common property of both. It is not, therefore, necessary for us to determine the question whether the separate estate of the wife can become the homestead, respecting which some doubts have been heretofore expressed by this Court. (8 Cal. 71; 14 Id. 474; 16 Id. 217.) The fact that she included it in her inventory of her separate estate does not operate as an estoppel upon her, even if the doctrine of estoppel applies to a married woman. The plaintiff was not thereby defrauded or injured in any way.
The pleadings and evidence sufficiently established the occupancy of the premises by the defendants as their home, but upon this point the findings of the Court are entirely silent. It seems that on a portion of the premises is a building used as a billiard saloon, barroom, and theater, and it may be questionable whether that portion
The defendants, in then- answer, set up that the ^Sheriff’s deed to the plaintiff was a cloud upon their title, which they asked to have removed by the decree of the Court. This relief they will be entitled to when it is” established what portion of the premises can be and what cannot be claimed by them as exempt under the Homestead Law. As to, that” portion found to be exempt, the decree should declare the Sheriff’s deed invalid.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- RILEY v. PEHL AND WIFE
- Cited By
- 3 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- Where a homestead right had been acquired prior to the passage of the amendment to the Homestead Law in 1860, a declaration of homestead could be made and recorded at any time prior to June 1st, 1862, and no right of homestead was lost by a failure to make the declaration before that time. Where property is conveyed to a wife and the deed shows upon its face a consideration paid, it becomes the common property of both husband and wife, and not the separate property of the wife. Query—Can the separate property of the wife become the homestead ? Where a homestead is sold by the Sheriff on an execution against the husband, or husband and wife, and a deed given to the purchaser therefor, it is a cloud upon the title, and a Court of Equity will remove it.