Court Opinion

ID: 8187390
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:10:04.045163+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:28.303528
License: Public Domain

Mahshall, J.
The question presented here may properly be stated thus: Does see. 2203, Stats. 1898, in terms providing that no mortgage or other alienation by a married man of his homestead, exempt by law from execution, shall be valid or of any effect as to such homestead without the signature of *279his wife, deal merely with, the homestead as a privilege, right, or interest in land, enabling the persons whom the statute was designed to protect to- enjoy the property as a home, leaving the husband free to deal with it in any way he may sée fit not inconsistent with the homestead right ? We cannot at this late day decide that as a new question. If it were otherwise, a different result of this appeal might occur than the one we have decided upon. In Conrad v. Schwamb, 53 Wis. 372, 10 N. W. 395, it was in effect held that the statutory disability of the husband goes only to such dealings with the land used as a homestead as interferes with such use, and that a deed executed by him alone, construed as a contract to convey after the_ extinguishment of the homestead right, does not so interfere. In Ferguson v. Mason, 60 Wis. 377, 19 N. W. 420, the court attempted to carefully consider sec. 2203, Stats. 1898, and all arguments that could reasonably he advanced, based upon other statutes relating to the subject of homestead, in support of the theory that the disability of the husband under such section goes to the entire property in the land, legal and equitable, resulting in a decision in favor of the affirmative of the question we have stated, that is, that such section uses the term “homestead” as descriptive of a right in land, a privilege to use it as a home, and that an equitable interest therein may he conveyed by the sole act of the husband, an interest entitling the grantee to the legal title to the land upon the termination of the homestead privilege. It was said that the statute must he construed as preventing him from conveying the legal title in prcesenti, or conveying a future estate in fee simple, because such an interest would enable the owner thereof to seriously prejudice the enjoyment of the homestead right; hut that the mere conveyance of an equitable interest, enabling the vendee to call for the legal title upon the termination of the homestead right, does not have that effect. In that the court followed judicial decisions made under statutes more or less similar to ours (Jewett v. Brock, *28032 Vt. 65; Whiteman v. Field, 53 Vt. 554; Gee v. Moore, 14 Cal. 416; McQuade v. Whaley, 31 Cal. 533; Smith v. Provin, 4 Allen, 516; Doyle v. Coburn, 6 Allen, 71; Stewart v. Mackey, 16 Tex. 56) in preference to decisions to tbe contrary under like statutes (Phillips v. Stauch, 20 Mich. 369; Hall v. Loomis, 63 Mich. 709, 30 N. W. 374; Barton v. Drake, 21 Minn. 299; Weitzner v. Thingstad, 55 Minn. 244, 56 N. W. 817; Clarke v. Koenig, 36 Neb. 572, 54 N. W. 842; Alford v. Lehman, Durr & Co. 76 Ala. 526; Pipkin v. Williams, 57 Ark. 242, 21 S. W. 433). The former authorities are to the effect that a married man may make a good conveyance of the legal title to land affected.by the homestead right, subject to the enjoyment of such right. This court did not go quite that far, as we have seen, holding that the furthest the husband can go, acting alone, is to make an executory contract binding the legal title in equity upon the satisfaction of the homestead privilege, and that a conveyance in form conveying the legal title should be given effect only as a conveyance of such equitable interest.
Many courts have gone so far as to hold that such a contract is not good for any purpose whatever; that the vendee therein can neither obtain the legal title to the premises under it in any situation, nor maintain an action against the vendor to recover the consideration paid. One of-the most significant of such cases is Weitzner v. Thingstad, supra. However, the idea that the homestead which the husband cannot convey except in the manner indicated in sec. 2203 is a mere right in land, and that the creation of an equitable right to the legal title, upon the termination of the homestead privilege, does not interfere Avith the latter interest and therefore may be created, Avas ingrafted upon and made a part of our statute, sec. 2203, as we have indicated, and tire decisions of this court, in every instance where the subject has come up since that time, have been in harmony therewith. In re Root’s Will, 81 Wis. 263, 267, 51 N. W. 435; Whitmore v. *281Hay, 85 Wis. 240, 55 N. W. 708; Town v. Gensch, 101 Wis. 445, 76 N. W. 1096, 77 N. W. 893. Tbe law bas thus stood for nearly a quarter of a century, and whether the court’s construction of the statute was right or wrong it must now be considered the law the same as if the idea involved were literally expressed in the statute. It relates to property. It has become, by the lapse of time, a rule of property, which, by well-settled principles, can only be rightly changed by legislative enactment. That branch of the government has had ample opportunity to consider the subject, and though the statutes have been carefully revised in recent years', no attempt has been made to change the nature of the statutory homestead as declared by this court. It may be that the statutes ought to be changed so that the meaning of the term “homestead,” where it occurs in the exemption clause, which unquestionably covers the whole title to the land, will be unmistakably identical with the homestead which the husband cannot alienate without the consent of his wife in the manner indicated in sec. 2203, and with the homestead which, under sec. 2271, Stats. 1898, if the owner dies not having fully devised the same, descends free from all judgments or claims against him except as therein indicated, to the end that all conveyances by a married man of his homestead or.any interest therein, legal or equitable, present or future, by deed or otherwise, without his wife’s consent, evidenced by her act of joining in the deed, shall be of no effect whatever. It seems that nothing short of that will efficiently preserve the property chosen by the husband for the family home, for the benefit of himself and family, till such time as he sees fit to abandon it as such.
It follows from what has been said that Conrad v. Schwamb, 53 Wis. 372, 10 N. W. 395, and Ferguson v. Mason, 60 Wis. 377, 19 N. W. 420, rule this case. -To try to distinguish one case from another upon the facts, where the ruling principles in one are plainly identical with those *282iii the other, creates uncertainty and confusion in the law. That should be avoided as to any subject, but particularly in respect to titles to real property. True, as counsel contends, in Conrad v. Schwamb the wife intended to sign a deed conveying the homestead lands, but by mistake other lands were described in the paper, while in this case the wife refused to sign the deed. But the decision went solely upon the ground that the statute deals only with a homestead right in land,, ánd that the wife’s signature is not essential to a conveyance-of an interest in the land which does not disturb such right. The principles of law upon which a decision is based are necessarily a part of the decision. Case v. Hoffman, 100 Wis. 314, 318, 75 N. W. 945; Wells, Res Jud. § 217; Trustees v. Stocker, 42 N. J. Law, 115. There can be no mistaking the significance of this language in the Conrad Case:
“The deed of 1863, executed by John Felton and wife to the defendant Schwamb, although it did not convey the land intended, must be treated in equity as an executory contract by John' Felton to convey such land. While the land intended to be conveyed remained the homestead of Felton and wife, the defendant could not have enforced specific performance of such executory contract. . . . But it was undoubtedly a valid contract, for the breach of which Felton would probably have been liable to respond in damages to Schwamb. . . . No good reason is perceived why Schwamb might not have maintained an action for specific-performance of such contract against John Felton, whenever it was in the power of Felton to convey the land bargained for.”
No significance is given, it will be seen, to the mere fact that the wife assented to the making of the deed. The law was declared the same as- it would have been had the wife not been a party to the transaction at all. The idea expressed is that the homestead right of the statute under sec. 2203 is one thing, and the land subject to that right another, and that it is the former interest in the realty to which the disability of the husband relates. That was brought out with unmistak*283able clearness in the later case of Ferguson v. Mason, supra, as we bare seen.
In the light of the foregoing we cannot escape the conclusion that onr statute, sec. 2203, as we are bound,to view it at this time, does not preclude a married man, by deed or contract executed by him alone, from conveying an equitable right to-the legal title to the lands used as the homestead for himself and wife at the time of such conveyance, upon the extinguishment of the homestead right by the death of the wife or otherwise; and that the deed in question in this case must be held good as such a conveyance and enforced against respondent, who became possessed of the legal title to the homestead lands upon the death of her father. That requires a reversal of the order appealed from.
By the Gourt. — The order appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to overrule the demurrer and for further proceedings according to law.