Hoge v. Hollister
Hoge v. Hollister
Opinion of the Court
delivered the following opinion:
Application to supersede the order of the chancellor appointing a' receiver, and directing him to take possession of the property.
The chancellor held that Mrs. Hollister was entitled to the benefit of the homestead exemption, but as the property was worth more than $1,000, and of such a character that the homestead could not be laid off, a sale was decreed, and $1,000 of the proceeds directed to be re-invested, in accordance with the statute, for the benefit of Mrs. Hollister and family, and subjecting the balance of the proceeds to the -payment of the creditors. The creditors, desiring to test Mrs. Hollister’s right to the exemption, proposed to appeal from so much of the decree as gave $1,000 of the proceeds of the sale for re-investment in a homestead,, but without suspending or interfering with the sale.
The result of this, as it was seen, would be that Mrs. Hollister would be turned out of her homestead upon the confirmation of the sale, and would be deprived of that provision of the decree in her favor for the purchase of a new homestead until the determination of the case in the Supreme Court, which, owing to the crowded state of the docket, might be delayed two or three years. To avoid this result, she also appealed, which had the effect to suspend the entire decree.
It is assumed that a final decree in the chancery court, settling the rights of the applicant to the legal title, and to the possession of the realty, is sufficient to entitle him to the appointment of a receiver pending the appeal.
This may be conceded, that is, in determining the correctness of the chancellor’s order appointing a receiver pending the appeal. It will be assumed for the time being that his previous decree settling the rights of the parties is correct, and under this rule there can be no doubt that if the property was so situated that a receiver could take possession of that part to which the right of homestead does not extend, and without depriving the occupants of their homestead, that could be no objection to it. But here the chancellor had decided that the occupants were entitled to the homestead occupation, that is, that they were entitled to live in and occupy the premises until they were sold, and when the purchaser was put in possession, the $1,000 of the proceeds should be re-invested for a new homestead.
Now, to appoint a receiver to take possession of the entire property pending the appeal, is giving to the creditors the benefit, not only of that part of the property which the chancellor had decided .they were-entitled to, but also giving the receiver possession of
If this order' of the chancellor is suspended, the creditors will be deprived of a security which the chancellor has decided they are entitled to, but if the order is executed, the family will be deprived, for a time, of a homestead, which he has decided they are entitled to. I think they should not, assuming this decree to be correct, be dispossessed until the purchaser be put in possession, and then they would have the benefit of the re-investment. Nor do I think the fact that Mrs. Hollister has appealed alters the case. Although, by the decree, she got all she claimed, the creditors, however, proposed to have that part of the decree which was in their favor, that is, for a sale, immediately executed, but to suspend, by appeal, that
In this view I do not see that it can be justly said that the appeal is for delay in an objectionable sense. The appeal is not so much to retain possession of that part belonging to creditors as it' is to retain possession of that which the family are entitled to. No fault can be attached to Mrs. Hollister for failing to give bond. I think that the rights of the family to the occupation of a homestead to which by law they are entitled is, at least, equal to the rights of the creditor to the balance of the property, and the family should not be dispossessed and deprived, even for a time, of this right in order that the creditor may not lose his rights to the rents of the balance. It is simply the misfortune of the creditors that the property is so situated that the rents cannot be separated and their part secured. I think the order should be superseded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- A. B. Hoge v. C. L. Hollister
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published