Court Opinion

ID: 9299921
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 17:06:26.027623+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:38.638397
License: Public Domain

BLODGETT. District Judge.
I do not find tlié precise question raised by these facts to have been decided by the supreme court of this state, or of any other state having an analogous statute: but, following the spirit of the adjudications so far made by the courts of this state, I think the defense *1045set up is made out by the facts. The principle of those decisions seems to be that the homestead estate is carved out of the general estate, and vested in the head of the family. The wife cannot be divested of her homestead right without a deed solemnly executed and acknowledged by her in the manner pointed out by the statute. In this case, the wife acquired her homestead right in the property, and at the time the divorce was applied for, was living thereon as her home. By the decree of divorce, she is charged with the custody and care of the child, and thus continued as the head of the family. She has done no act to divest herself of her right. It is true, the decree allows her $500 alimony, to be paid by the husband, but there is no evidence that the court intended that in lieu of her homestead right, even if a decree would have been effective for that purpose.
In the case of Vanzant v. Vanzant, 23 Ill. 485, the supreme court of this state says, “The intention of this act is manifestly to save the homestead for the family. * * * The natural death of the householder would not destroy it, nor would his civil death for crime. If this was not so, the object of the act would be defeated, and the beneficence of the legislature of no avail. The wife was the meritorious cause of the divorce. The children composing the family were committed to her care and nurture, and have, in our judgment, an undoubted right to occupy the homestead. As a home, and as their home, it has never been granted away, or the right to occupy it released by any one competent | to release it. The spirit and policy of the j homestead act seem to demand this eonces- j sion and to regard the' complainant, for this j purpose, as a widow and the head of a fam- ¡ ily.”
It is true, that case differed from this in many material features. There the wife by her bill alleged that she furnished the money for the purchase of the homestead, and the court, by its decree, awarded it to her. j But the rule laid down in that case seems j manifestly to tend to the conclusion I have I arrived at in this. j
Proof was offered oh the trial to show that ¡ before the divorce was granted, and while I the bill was pending, a parol arrangement was entered into between Iteed and his wife by which he agreed to pay her $1,000, — $500 of which was to be cash and the balance in certain notes, — he agreeing not to resist her application for divorce, and on receipt of that amount she was to give up possession of the house. This agreement or stipulation, however, was not embodied in the decree, and was undoubtedly void, the husband and wife having no power to make a contract of that nature during the coverture. I do not, therefore, deem the legal rights of the defendant affected by this arrangement or the evidence of it.
Judgment for defendant