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action to enjoin the defendants, and each of them, "from selling, threatening to sell or offering for sale said premises or any part thereof."

The complaint was filed May 14, 1902, and a general demurrer on May 20th following, but for some reason not disclosed by the record, probably, though, because of the disqualification of the presiding judge of said superior court, the order overruling the demurrer was not made until July 31, 1905, and the answer was filed the same day. The cause was partially tried on the sixth day of December, 1905, and completed on the sixteenth day of November, 1906. Plaintiff prevailed and the appeal is from the judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial.

1. It is claimed that no person other than "heads of families" is entitled to a homestead or homestead exemption. The contention is grounded upon the language of section 1 of article XVII of the constitution, providing that "The legislature shall protect by law, from forced sale, a certain portion of the homestead and other property of all heads of families." But, as pointed out by respondent, the constitution does not "limit the power of the legislature to give homestead privileges to 'heads of families' only. It leaves the entire matter of such privileges, the method of selection of the homestead and the persons by whom the selection may be made entirely to the legislature, demanding only that at least heads of families shall be protected." The argument of appellants might possess merit if it were addressed to a provision of the constitution of the United States containing a grant of power to Congress, but in view of the familiar distinction between that instrument and a state constitution, it is apparent that the authority of the legislature, representing the law-making power of the people, to extend the homestead privilege to other persons than heads of families, is not withheld nor restricted by said provision of the constitution. It is said in Beaton v. Reid, 111 Cal. 487, [44 Pac. 167], that "the subject of homesteads is one wholly committed by the constitution to the legislature, with simply the general mandate that the latter shall protect it by law from forced sale. (Const., art. XVIII.) The extent of the right, therefore, and the mode of its protection, with the limitation of the

rights of creditors therein, are purely matters of legislative prescription, and something with which we have nothing to do but to construe and apply."

In sections 1260 and 1266 of the Civil Code the legislature has provided clearly and amply for the case before us. In the former the enactment is that "Homesteads may be selected and claimed: 1. Of not exceeding $5,000 in value by any head of a family; 2. Of not exceeding $1,000 in value by any other person," and the latter section, "Any person other than the head of a family, in the selection of a homestead, must execute and acknowledge, in the same manner as a grant of real property is acknowledged, a 'declaration of homestead,'" and the succeeding section provides what said declaration must contain.

It is admitted here that the value of the property was and is less than $1,000, and the declaration complied with the requirement of the statute. There can be, therefore, no question as to the unsoundness of the first position of appellants. (Roth v. Insley, 86 Cal. 141, [24 Pac. 853].)

2. We think the court did not err in denying the motion for a nonsuit. It is claimed by respondent that she might have rested upon the pleadings alone, as there is no denial in the answer of the allegations of the complaint as to her ownership of the property and her residence there, or as to the sufficiency of the declaration of homestead, and it is not denied that she "has resided upon and claims said premises as a homestead," and furthermore, it is urged that whether or not the building within which plaintiff resided was primarily used for hotel purposes and whether her residence there was incidental to conducting such hotel business was a question of fact raised by appellants with the burden of proof devolving upon them. This need not be decided, however, as, considering the testimony in the light of the inferences most favorable to plaintiff and keeping in view the admitted facts, it ought to be held that the motion was properly denied. That the plaintiff actually resided in the building and that it was her only home is not questioned. We must assume that the declaration of homestead was made in the utmost good faith, as there is not a particle of evidence to the contrary. It would indeed be a harsh rule that, under

the circumstances disclosed here, would deprive this widow of the homestead of trifling value simply because she used it to make a precarious living. If the question is to be resolved by a determination of the comparative importance of the two, it is more reasonable to hold that the business rather than the home was the mere incident.

As we have seen, the trial took place years after the complaint was filed and the plaintiff was not present. Her counsel therefore called a witness subpoenaed by the defense, who testified: "I know the plaintiff, Ellen Hohn; have known her about eighteen years. During the time I have known her, her residence was Onion Valley, at what is commonly known as the Onion Valley House. She resided there a part of the year 1901, to my certain knowledge. During the time I knew her she did not reside anywhere else that I know of. . . . It is fifteen years since I was over there. I boarded there at one time in July, 1890. At that time the general nature of the business that was being conducted there was the hotel business. . . . When we were boarding there, the place was open to the general public. . . . After John Hohn died she continued to live there herself and conducted the place as she had formerly.'

In Skinner v. Hall, 69 Cal. 198, [10 Pac. 408], it is said: "After making an actual residence upon property, one may file a homestead upon it at the end of a day as well as at the end of a month or a year. So one may file and maintain a homestead upon property which is partially rented out or used for other purposes than his residence. (Ackley v. Chamberlain, 16 Cal. 181, [76 Am. Dec. 516]; Phelps v. Rooney, 9 Wis. 70, [76 Am. Dec. 244].)"

In the Ackley case, supra, it is declared, through Chief Justice Field, that "In this case the building was intended for a dwelling-house as well as a hotel. . . . The nature and extent of the business did not interfere with its general character as a dwelling-house. The keeping of boarders and accommodation of lodgers and travelers were not inconsistent with the main purpose of taking up the one hundred and sixty acres and the erection of the building."

Judging from the description of the building it is quite probable that here the original purpose was to prepare for

boarders and lodgers as well as for a home, but it is no different in principle from the Ackley case.

In Heathman v. Holmes, 94 Cal. 295, [29 Pac. 405], we find this language: "It would be strange, indeed, if the occupants of a house could not use part of it for family revenue, no matter how favorable the opportunity might be to do so, without forfeiting the home itself. There is nothing in the homestead laws which prohibits such use, and it has been settled here that 'the homestead statute is a remedial measure and should be liberally construed.' (Schuyler v. Broughton, 76 Cal. 524, [18 Pac. 436]; Southwick v. Davis, 78 Cal. 504, [21 Pac. 127].)" The court proceeds to distinguish Laughlin v. Wright, 63 Cal. 113, upon which appellants here rely, by calling attention to the consideration that "So far as the facts appear in that case, the family had never really made the premises their bona fide home." So in the case of Maloney v. Hefer, 75 Cal. 422, [7 Am. St. Rep. 180, 17 Pac. 539], there were two houses entirely separate and distinct from each other. The family lived in one of the houses and rented the other, and it was merely held that the homestead did not include the house in which the claimants did not live.

In re Ogburn, 105 Cal. 95, [38 Pac. 498], is in harmony with the foregoing, and holds that "the homestead character of the premises is not destroyed, either in whole or in part, by the fact that the husband and wife use part of the building for doing their work as artisans, where the work does not constitute such a pretentious business as to blot out the character of the place as a residence and home, or to make the latter merely incidental to the former."

In Estate of Levy, 141 Cal. 646, [99 Am. St. Rep. 92, 75 Pac. 301], after a review of the earlier cases, it is stated by the court, through Mr. Justice Angellotti, that "In no case has it been decided that where a portion of a building is dedicated to residence purposes, and is actually occupied by the claimant as the home of himself and his family, and such occupation is not merely incidental to the carrying on of some business in other parts of the building, the building and the land on which it is situated cannot be legally selected as a homestead."

In the case of Harlan v. Schulze, 7 Cal. App. 287, [94 Pac. 379], this court held that "where the claim of the homestead

is valid on its face, and there is nothing therein to indicate that it is to be used for any other purpose than as a residence for husband and wife, the incidental use by the wife of the home for purposes of prostitution does not destroy the right to the homestead."

The facts here, we think, bring the case within the foregoing decisions.

3. In the defendants' answer it is alleged that "since the commencement of this action plaintiff has abandoned any and all claim to said premises as a homestead, by a grant thereof executed and acknowledged by her, and by ceasing to reside upon the same.” There was no finding as to the latter averment, but the allegation is immaterial as it is well settled that the homestead can be abandoned only in the manner pointed out in section 1243 of the Civil Code-that is, by the declaration of abandonment or a grant thereof. (Simonson v. Burr, 121 Cal. 582, [54 Pac. 87].)

It must be clear that no valid sale could be made of premises by virtue of the levy of an execution where neither the judgment nor execution creates any lien upon the property. The homestead being in full force and effect and there being no contention that the judgment is within the purview of section 1241, Civil Code, the docketing of the judgment created no lien (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 671; Dam v. Zink, 112 Cal. 91, [44 Pac. 331]); and the same thing is true of the levy of the execution. Section 1240 of the Civil Code provides that "The homestead is exempt from execution or forced sale except as in this title provided." The attempted levy of an execution upon property that is exempt must be futile to affect any interest whatever of the homestead claimant, and the transfer of her interest a year afterward can have no effect to vitalize a void and nugatory proceeding taken to subject the property to seizure and sale.

In Lubbock v. McMann, 82 Cal. 230, [16 Am. St. Rep. 108, 22 Pac. 1147], it is declared that "a judgment creates no lien upon property thus affected and a levy gives no right, except to inaugurate the proceedings for the admeasurement of such excess. ... But though the sale of a homestead under execution conveys no title, it may create a cloud and involve the homestead claimant in litigation, and will therefore be enjoined."

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