From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Mower v. Sharit

Supreme Court of Alabama
Feb 5, 1920
204 Ala. 50 (Ala. 1920)

Opinion

6 Div. 992.

January 15, 1920. Rehearing Denied February 5, 1920.

Appeal from Circuit Court, Jefferson County; C. B. Smith, Judge.

Smith McCary, of Birmingham, for appellant. Under the evidence in this case, the land had lost its character as a homestead at the time the deed was executed. 39 Ill. 83; 71 N.W. 183; 3 Tex. Civ. App. 200, 22 S.W. 69; 30 Fla. 350, 11 So. 542; 124 Ala. 296, 27 So. 302.

Harsh, Harsh Harsh, of Birmingham, for appellee. The facts did not show an abandonment of the homestead. 110 Ala. 406, 18 So. 315, 55 Am. St. Rep. 29; 91 Ala. 357, 8 So. 546; 83 Ala. 123, 3 So. 545; 106 Ala. 448, 17 So. 623; 201 Ala. 215, 77 So. 743.


Plaintiff sues in ejectment to recover certain lands, less in area than 80 acres and less in value than $2,000, to which he claims title through a deed purporting to have been executed and acknowledged by defendant on September 28, 1906. Defendant denies that he ever signed, acknowledged, or delivered the deed in question, and the testimony of his witnesses tends to show that he was so intoxicated on the date of its alleged execution that he did not know or understand the nature of the act even if he did so. That issue was therefore one of fact to be determined by the jury.

The tract sued for was, prior to 1903, the homestead of defendant and his family, including his wife and minor children. His wife did not execute the deed upon which plaintiff's claim is founded, and a vital and decisive question in the case is whether, under the evidence, the land had lost its homestead character by its abandonment as such prior to and at the time of plaintiff's alleged execution of the deed.

The undisputed facts bearing upon this question are as follows: About the year 1903 defendant's wife abandoned him and went to North Alabama, where she thereafter resided. Thereupon defendant moved with his family to the home of his father-in-law, which was on a tract adjoining, for the purpose of taking care of his children, and annually cultivated six or seven acres of his own place. He was never absent therefrom more than two or three weeks at a time, but for about a year prior to September, 1906, he himself boarded at a place about seven miles away, to be conveniently located for his work. He kept his household goods at the home place all the while, and often went there, and always claimed it as his home. Prior to this suit he built another house on the place, and, his first wife having died, he married again and moved on the place with his family and has lived there ever since. The contention of appellant (plaintiff below) is that these facts, coupled with defendant's execution of the deed while mentally capable of doing so, were sufficient to show an abandonment of the homestead as a conclusion of law, thereby dispensing with the necessity of the wife's joinder in the deed to render it a valid alienation of the property, as required by statute.

The owner and occupant of a homestead may abandon it in such sense as to destroy its homestead character by ceasing to occupy it as such, without any definite intention to return. Lehman Co. v. Bryan, 67 Ala. 558; Pollak v. Caldwell, 94 Ala. 149, 151, 10 So. 266; Caldwell v. Pollak, 91 Ala. 353, 357, 8 So. 546. A temporary absence animo revertendi, no other homestead being acquired in the meantime, is not an abandonment; and the duration of the absence, though relevant to the question of intention, is never per se conclusive. Bunker v. Paquette, 37 Mich. 79; Kaes v. Gross, 92 Mo. 647, 3 S.W. 840, 1 Am. St. Rep. 767; 102 Am. St. Rep. 411, note.

We think it was in this case a question of fact for the jury to determine whether or not defendant intended to abandon his homestead when he moved away from it with his family, or at any time thereafter before his alleged execution of the deed of September 28, 1906. An offer to sell one's homestead not then in actual occupation as such, is, of course, a fact to be considered, but it is not conclusive evidence of an intention to abandon. Burkhardt v. Walker, 132 Mich. 93, 92 N.W. 778, 102 Am. St. Rep. 386, note, 407. So, also, the execution of a deed to the homestead without conformity to legal requirements if followed by delivery of possession to the purchaser, would be an abandonment. Thacker v. Morris, 166 Ala. 395, 400, 52 So. 73; McDonald v. Crandall, 43 Ill. 231, 92 Am. Dec. 112, 115. But we know of no authority holding that the execution of a deed, invalid without a previous abandonment, is in itself a conclusive act of abandonment, unless it is accompanied or followed by a surrender of possession to the purchaser. 21 Cyc. 605b, and cases cited; Shepard v. Brewer, 65 Ill. 383; Horn v. Tufts, 39 N.H. 478.

It results that the instructions requested by plaintiff were properly refused, because they withdrew from the jury the question of defendant's intention under the facts hypothesized. Let the judgment be affirmed.

Affirmed.

ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and THOMAS, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Mower v. Sharit

Supreme Court of Alabama
Feb 5, 1920
204 Ala. 50 (Ala. 1920)
Case details for

Mower v. Sharit

Case Details

Full title:MOWER v. SHARIT

Court:Supreme Court of Alabama

Date published: Feb 5, 1920

Citations

204 Ala. 50 (Ala. 1920)
85 So. 23

Citing Cases

Matthews v. Matthews

Milo Moody, of Scottsboro, and H. G. Bailey, of Boaz, for appellee. Temporary absence from a homestead, with…

Kyser v. McGlinn

175 Ala. 309, 57 So. 720; 112 Ala. 256, 20 So. 524. Twenty years' continuous possession is not defeated by…