Court Opinion

ID: 7111157
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:26:32.55048+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:44.875250
License: Public Domain

Bishop, J.
Plaintiff is the widow of William Edinger, deceased. William Edinger died'in 1887, .and at the time thereof he was seized in fee of a farm of one hundred and sixty acres in Plymouth county, which he, with his family, had occupied as a homestead for many years. Plaintiff was appointed administratrix of her husband’s estate, and, acting as such, in December, 1891, she procured an order of court authorizing her to make sale of said farm as a whole, and she alleges that she did then sell the same for the sum of $4,340, “ of which sum there was set apart to her as her *392distributive share, and in lieu of her homestead rights in the said property, the sum of $1,446.66.” The balance of the proceeds was used to pay on claims filed against the estate. Some time thereafter plaintiff purchased the property in controversy, consisting of two and a fraction acres of land within the incorporate limits of Kingsley, in said county, paying therefor out of the moneys so received by her from the proceeds of the sale of the farm. Since her purchase of the '.Kingsley property, and down to the present time, she has resided thereon as her home place. In 1887, plaintiff and her husband became jointly indebted to defendant Lena ’Bain. A portion of such indebtedness was paid out of the estate, and the. balance remaining unpaid was put in judgment as against plaintiff in 1892. An execution was issued on such judgment and placed in the hands of the defendant O. F. TIerron, sheriff of Plymouth county, who by virtue thereof levied upon and sold the property in controversy to defendant Bain.
1. homesteads: share; reinvestment* ex* emptíon. Plaintiff seeks in this action to have said sale set aside, it being her contention that the property is exempt to her as a homestead. Conceding that plaintiff intended, as she testifies that she did, when she accepted the share coming to her from' the sale of the farm, to invest the same,' or a part thereof, in a new homestead, and conceding that she is such a person as might lawfully claim a homestead under the laws of this State, still we think her contention in this case cannot be sustained. Under the provisions of Code 1873, section 2440, she was entitled to have one-third in value of the real property possessed by her deceased husband set apart to her as her property in fee simple, and this is what was done. The effect thereof was to relinquish any right of homestead she may have had in the property, as the right of homestead could have been preserved to her only by electing to retain the same in lieu of a distributive share in fee of the property. Code 1873, section 2008.- Plaving made her election in favor of *393a distributive share, the homestead right was. extinguished when the sale of the farm was accomplished, and one-thirdJ thereof in value was paid over to her. Erom that time forward she was the owner simply of the moneys in her hands, possessed of no other or greater rights in respect thereto than would have resulted had the same been derived from any other source. Meyer v. Meyer, 23 Iowa, 372; Hornbeck v. Brown, 91 Iowa, 321; Askwith v. Doerscher, 105 Iowa, 394. Manifestly we have no occasion to consider whát would have been the rights of plaintiff had she elected to retain her homestead interest, and in the course of subsequent proceedings, brought for the purpose of admeasurement of her dower, it had been found advisable to make a sale of the property. As the debt due to defendant Bain was contracted long before plaintiff acquired the property in controversy, and as the same was not acquired with the proceeds of a prior homestead, it follows that she cannot complain of a sale thereof under execution, even though she is in the occupancy thereof as a present homestead. .Code section 2976. It does not appear that she had any other property which should have been first resorted, to for the payment of the debt. If such there was, it was for her to point it out.
Wednesday, October 26, 1904.
The conclusion is that the decree was erroneous, and the case is remanded to the district court with instructions to enter a decree in harmony with this opinion.— Reversed.