Thompson, Lampkin & Co. v. Tillotson
Thompson, Lampkin & Co. v. Tillotson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill is filed to enjoin the sale under execution of eighty acres of land, upon the ground that it constitutes the homestead of complainant and his family. Jt is not now, and has not been for several years, occupied as a residence by complainant or any member of his family ; but it is claimed that their absence has been “ temporary,” cum animo revertendi, and occasioned by such “ casualty or necessit}*’ ” as does not cause a forfeiture of the exemption. Complainant removed from the place in January, 1875. He had not returned to it, nor, so far as the record indicates, did he propose -to return to it, when the final decree passed, in September, 1877. He abandoned the place, which was located in Copiah County, because, as he says, he found it impossible to make a livelihood on it for himself and family, and he failed to obtain employment in the neigh-
Our present statute is much more explicit, and, we think, narrower in its terms, than art. 281, p. 529, Code of 1857, which received interpretation in Campbell v. Adair, 45 Miss. 170. The controversy in that case was between a creditor and the widow of a deceased exemptionist. The statute declared that the exemption should continue after the death of the husband, “for the benefit of the widow and family of the deceased, some or one of them continuing to occupy it.” It was held that the occupation might be by tenant, though it is to be noted that in that case the widow had returned to and was living on the premises at the date of the decree.
Sect. 2144 of Code of 1871 is much more definite and stringent in its terms. It declares that “ whenever the debtor shall cease to reside on his homestead, it shall be liable for his debts, unless his removal be temporary, by reason of some casualty or necessity, and with the purpose of speedily reoccupying it as soon as the cause of his absence can be removed.”
This language leaves but little room for construction. There must be actual residence on the premises; but temporary absence will not cause a forfeiture, if it be produced by casualty or necessity, and there exists the purpose to speedily
Decree reversed and bill dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thompson, Lampkin & Co. v. Matilda J. Tillotson and Husband
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Homestead. Abandonment. Husband and wife. Under sect. 2144, Code 1871, if a debtor, who is unable to make a living on his homestead, removes to a better location, in another county, where he registers as a resident and votes, neither he nor his wife can, after two years, when the land is about being sold under a decree against him, enjoin the sale on the ground that the property is exempt, although, on leaving, he rented the land, reserving the right to return and occupy a house thereon if his new location proved unprofitable. 2. Same. Code 1871, sect. 2144, construed. ' In Code 1871, sect. 2144 (which is more stringent than Code 1857, p. 529, art. 281, construed in Campbell v. Adair, 45 Miss. 170), the word “ casualty ” refers to accident, — as fire, flood, or social or family disaster or misfortune, causing temporary absence; while “necessity” may embrace considerations of health, or travel, or public business, or private business emergency of an exceptional and temporary character. The two words may imply various other events, impossible to enumerate, but do not include an indefinite abandonment for years, induced by the fact that the owner has found elsewhere a location deemed more advantageous.