Court Opinion

ID: 8299913
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-17 11:11:28.037348+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:44:15.400096
License: Public Domain

Caldwell, J.
W. A. McBroom devised a tract of land in Putnam County to Jeff Ally and Joel McBroom, and directed his executors to divide it among them. After the division was made, Joel McBroom intermarried with his present wife, M. J. McBroom. Subsequently he sold his share of the land, which was then and is now worth less than $1,000.00, to J. E. Lewis, and gave him a bond for title. On the 24th of August, 1892, he executed to Lewis a deed in fee according to the terms of the title bond, and his wife, who was then a minor, joined him in the deed.
*424When Lewis bad been in possession two or three .years, he sold and conveyed the land to L. C., Jeff, and Andy Whitefield. Afterwards L. C. and Jeff Whitefield sold and conveyed their interest in the land to 'Andy Whitefield, who, on the 6th of April, 1898, sold and conveyed it to Valina V. Whitefield.
Thereafter, Joel MeBroom and his wife, who had never owned any other land, filed this bill to avoid their deed on. account of her minority at the time of its execution, and to set np a right of homestead in the land.
The Chancellor dismissed the bill. The Court of Chancery Appeals reversed his decree and granted the relief sought to the extent of allowing the complainants a homestead in the land, with reversion to Valma V. Whitefield, the last vendee.
The action of the latter tribunal is obviously correct.
1. The division of the original tract of land by the executors, though in parol only, was a sufficient severance of the tenancy in common to invest Joel MeBroom with separate title to his share thereof, and to bring that share, other prerequisites being established, within the provisions of the homestead law. Meacham, v. Meacham, 91 Tenn., 532.
2. Being a married man, residing in this State, and having no other realty, he, as the *425bead of the family, was, at the time of bis sale and conveyance thereof, entitled to a homestead therein; and, being so entitled, he could not divest himself of that right without the valid joinder of his wife in his deed. Const., Art. 11, Sec. 11; Code (Shannon’s), § 3798.
3. Her joinder, though in proper form for adult married women, was ineffective against her disaffirmance, seasonably made, as in this instance, because she was at the time a minor, and, therefore, had no legal capacity to convey any interest of her own or to give binding consent to her husband’s conveyance. Scott v. Buchanan, 11 Hum., 467; McGan v. Marshall, 7 Hum., 121; Wheaton v. East, 5 Yerg., 59; Bradshaw v. Van Valkenburg, 97 Tenn., 316; Walton v. Gaines, 94 Tenn., 421; 1 Devlin on Deeds, Secs. 86, 91.
4. Hence the deed to Lewis had only the effect that it would have had without any joinder on her part, and that was simply to pass the title subject to the homestead right, which was left unimpaired as to both him and her. March v. Russell, 1 Lea, 543; Case Co. v. Joyce, 89 Tenn., 352; Cox v. Keathley, 99 Tenn., 522.
5. It matters not that Mrs. McBroom is not shown still to be a minor, for if minority had been her only disability, she would have been allowed a reasonable time, after attaining her majority, to disaffirm the deed (5 Yerg., 59; 7 Hum., 121; 11 Hum., 467), and, besides, being *426in fact under the disability of coverture also, her right, of disaffirmance continues until she becomes discovert. 94 Tenn., 421.
6. Nor is her right of disaffirmance dependent upon her return of the consideration paid by Lewis for the land, for it does not appear that she received that consideration or any part of it. Unless sbe were shown to have received the price, restitution cannot be made a condition for the relief sbe seeks. Bradshaw v. Van Valkenburg, 97 Tenn., 323.
Let the decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals be affirmed.
MOTION ROE LIEN.
Counsel of the complainants in this cause move the Court for a lien on the recovery allowed their clients for reasonable fees for services rendered.
Were the recovery of land merely, as such, there could be no doubt of the right to have the lien declared. But such is not the case. The homestead, as a property right, is peculiar and exceptional. It is exempt, absolutely from sale under legal process, in any way, at the instance of any creditor, except for public taxes, debts for purchase money, or improvements. Const., Art. XI., Sec. 11; Code (Shannon’s), § 3798. The exception does not include attorney’s fees, consequently the homestead cannot, by legal process, be *427sold for their payment; and it would be folly for the Court to undertake to fix a lien on property that could not be sold to enforce the lien in case of default. Indeed, the exemption from sale for such a debt necessarily precludes the Court from declaring a lien therefor. To validly incumber a homestead of husband and wife with a lien for liabilities other than those embraced in the exception found in the fundamental and statutory law, the same formalities must be observed as in case of voluntary sale thereof by them; that is,. it must be done by their mint consent, evidenced by proper instrument of writing executed by them, and privily acknowledged by the wife.
In the case of McLean v. Lerch, 105 Tenn., 693, it did not appear that the homesteader, against whom a lien declared by his consent was enforced, had a living wife; hence that case is not an authority for the present motion. A widower, as there ruled, may well waive his homestead exemption and consent to the declaration of a lien upon the property; but when the relation of husband and wife exists, as in this case, a lien for non-excepted debts can be fixed upon the homestead in no other way than by their joint consent, shown as before indicated herein.
The motion is refused.