Court Opinion

ID: 9833551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 22:49:29.925693+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:04.216129
License: Public Domain

CODY, Justice.
Appellees, in the district court of Colorado county, brought this suit to enjoin the Lumber Company and the constable of a precinct of that county from selling, under an order of sale foreclosing, an attachment lien issued by a district court of Bexar county, a 40-acre tract of land located in Colorado county about seven miles from Eagle Lake, claimed by them as a homestead, and to remove the cloud thereby cast on their title. It was a nonjury case. The court gave the judgment asked by appellees, and filed neither findings of fact nor conclusions of law.
Evidence given in support of the judgment was: Appellees, and such children as they had before 1929, had lived on the 40-acre tract from 1918 until that year, when they moved one of the two dwelling houses thereon therefrom to a lot in Eagle Lake, being the house that had been occupied by appel-lees and family. The other dwelling house was occupied by appellee Carter Walker’s 'parents, whom he supported; his father died three years before the trial. During the time prior to the removal of one of the residences — not to detail the evidence at length — appellees had used, occupied, and operated their 40-acre farm as is usual with farmers. The two dwelling houses on his farm were alike, except that the one which he moved into Eagle Lake had a sleeping porch attached to it. This move was made to put his children in school, as on the farm they were about two miles from the nearest ■school, which was but a seven-grade school, and too far removed for his children to go to alone; and the winter rains made the roads impassable in that section. Appellees never intended the town property to be their homestead, and never intended to abandon their farm as their homestead, but always claimed it as their home. And again— not to detail the evidence at length — Walker continued to make the same use of his farm after he moved the dwelling house he lived in to town, and was regularly at the farm daily, and frequently at night, staying there in his other dwelling; in every room of which was furniture belonging to him. During this time the barn on the farm burned down, which he replaced at a cost of $500. He offered the town property to the Lumber Company in part satisfaction of its debt — it was heavily mortgaged — and also the onion crop growing on the farm. The Lumber Company accepted such offer on a Friday, but ran the attachment on the 40-acre tract the next day.
Evidence against the judgment was: That Walker ran a meat market in town, into which, after moving to town, he put about $2,300 additional equipment. He added about $2,000 worth of improvements to the house he moved to town, which, for a man of his circumstances, was consistent with the intention of permanently living there.
At the time of the trial the appellees were still living in the town property; and the sworn tax rolls of the county, properly signed by him, showed that Carter Walker claimed the town property as his homestead for tax exemption purposes, which Walker explained away by saying that these were filled out by the tax assessor, and that he never heard of the $3,000 state tax-exemption ; nor knew what it meant.
Appellants ably attack the court’s judgment in a strong concise brief, filled with compact sentences. Their position is that the dwelling house in Eagle Lake had been impressed with the homestead character while it was yet located on the farm; and that the homestead character attaches to a dwelling house primarily, and to the land to which it is fixed only secondarily, citing as in point Cullers v. James, 66 Tex. 494, 1 S.W. 314; Grimes v. Cline (Tex.Civ.App.) 300 S.W. 235; and appellants contend there *794must be an actual physical abandonment of the removed dwelling house before it could lose its homestead character, citing Clem Lumber Co. v. Elliott Lumber Co. (Tex.Com.App.) 254 S.W. 935; and also further contend that appellees could have successfully enjoined a forced sale of the town property, thereby proving it to be appel-lees’ homestead.
Further, appellants contend that, as appel-lees were using the town house as their homestead and had always done so, they could not detach that character from it by the mere intention in the future to abandon it,' and have a home on the farm, quoting from the Supreme Court in Bell v. Crabb, 244 S.W. 371, 372: “The acquisition of title to residence property, coupled with its occupancy and use by the family as a home, constitute the highest and most conclusive evidence of its homestead character.”
It is elementary, of course, that, whether the homestead character is fixed to specific property, is a fact question. We cannot say, from the evidence of the use and occupancy that appellees continued to make of the farm and the residence that remained on it, that' — had the court concluded there had never been a physical abandonment of the farm dwelling as a homestead— he would have been without reason to sustain him. Certainly, under authority of Farmer v. Hale, 14 Tex.Civ.App. 73, 37 S.W. 164 (writ denied), the court was amply justified in rendering judgment for appel-lees. Believing the judgment should be affirmed, it is so ordered.
Affirmed.