Wiseman v. Parker
Wiseman v. Parker
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Wiseman had no title nor any vested interest in the lands of her husband during his life, and at his death, by legal devolution, there was cast upon her and her minor children, the homestead of the husband. She took this homestead precisely as the husband left it, and was without power to make a selection of a homestead under § 1972, code of 1892. This-right to select by a statutory declaration belongs solely to the-owner of the lands. If the husband had, during his life, selected the homestead, the wife would be confined to that selection; if no selection has been made by the husband, then the wife may have an allotment of the homestead, as provided by our statutes-in similar cases — for example, as in § 1976 of our code, where provision is made for allotment of the homestead where none has been selected by the exemptionist, in cases where officers holding executions are driven to levy on lands, there being no-other property out of which the execution may be satisfied.
■ While the appellee’s selection of the homestead was not allowable, as the court below properly held, yet it was error to allot, her, by the court’s own action, the quarter section on which the residence of the husband in his lifetime was situated. The statute, § 1976, code of 1892, directs the following general method of designating a homestead in those instances where there has been either no selection or an improper selection: t£A tract of land in the form of (1) a square, or (2) a par
It is evident, therefore, that, in the nature of things, a court, of itself, cannot make an allotment which, properly made, demands knowledge of and acquaintance with the entire premises
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the foregoing opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Martha Wiseman v. N. J. Parker, Admr., etc.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Exempt Property. Homestead. Selection by owner. Widow of ownw. Code 1892, 1 1972. Under § 1972, code 1892, the right to make a selection of a homestead, by statutory declaration, is in the owner of the land, and, when he has died without having exercised such right, his widow, to whom the homestead has descended, as tenant in common with their children, has no such right of selection. 2. Same. Homestead. Qua/rter section containing dwelling house. Allotment not confined to same. Code 1892, 1975, 1976. On the allotment of a homestead, under (jg 1975, 1976, code 1892, to consist of “ a tract of land in the form of (1) a square, or (2) a parallelogram, if practicable, and composed, if practicable, of contiguous parcels, and including the dwelling house, and, if practicable, the other principal buildings, and not to exceed one hundred and sixty acres in area nor two thousand dollars in value,” there is no legal requirement confining the allotment to the quarter section on which the dwelling house is situated, although such leg-al subdivision is in the form of a square, and does not exceed one hundred and sixty acres in area nor two thousand dollars in value. 3. Same. Allotment. Practicability. Cowi should not make same. Commissioners. Code 1892, $ 1975. The condition of practicability annexed to the preference of one mode of allotment over another, expressed in g 1975, code 1892, regulating the allotment of homesteads in rural lands, has reference to the rights and welfare of both the exemptionist and creditors, and such an allotment should not be made by the court itself, a commission of freeholders or householders, familiar with lands and agriculture, being- better able to make the same with reasonable fairness and accuracy.