112 Ind. 53 | Ind. | 1887
Complaint by Edward P. Brown and David Ullery against James Barnard, Bennett Lyman, James Sims, John S. Gould, Charles Fleetwood, George H. Wells, Meyer M. Jacobs, Lewis Heilbrenner, William D. Messenger, William Shearer and Samuel J. Shearer, to have certain apparent liens on real estate cancelled and discharged.
As causes of complaint it was alleged that, on the 17th day of November, 1883, the defendants James Barnard and Bennett Lyman recovered a judgment against the plaintiff Brown, before a justice of the peace of Elkhart county, for the sum of $9.10 and costs of suit, taxed at $5.91; that, on the 15th day of January, 1884, a duly certified transcript of said judgment was filed and properly recorded in the office of the clerk of the Elkhart Circuit Court; that, on the 26th day of November, 1883, the defendant Sims also recovered judgment before the same justice of the peace for the sum of $73.73 and costs of suit, taxed at $5.76; that, on the 15th day of January, 1884, a certified transcript of that judgment was also filed and recorded in the office of the said clerk of the Elkhart Circuit Court; that, on the 29th day of January, 1884, the defendants Gould, Fleetwood and Wells likewise recovered a judgment before the same justice against the plaintiff Brown for the sum of $68.95, a transcript of which said judgment was likewise filed and recorded in the same clerk’s office on the 6th day of February, 1884; that, on the 31st day of January, 1884, the defendant Messenger recovered a judgment against the plaintiff Brown before the same justice, for a sum of money not specifically named, a transcript of which judgment was in like manner filed and recorded in the same clerk’s office ; that, on said 31st day of
Copies of both of said schedules were filed with, and made' a part of, the complaint.
A schedule purporting to contain a list of all the property owned by Brown at the time of the commencement of this suit, was also filed with, and made a part of, the complaint. But there was no averment as to the total value of' the property described in any one of the schedules.
As a conclusion, the complaint demanded that the property described in the last named schedule should be ordered to bo set apart to Brown as exempt from execution; that the liens seemingly created by the filing and recording of the transcripts of judgments, as herein set forth, upon the lot so sold by Brown to Ullery, be decreed to be cancelled, and inoperative and void as against said lot; that Ullery’s title should be quieted, and that the plaintiffs might have all other proper relief.
The defendants demurred severally to the complaint, upon the ground that the facts alleged by it were insufficient to constitute a cause of action against any one of them, but their demurrer was overruled as to all. They then answered in.denial, and the court, after hearing the evidence, came to the conclusion that all the material facts alleged in the complaint were true; that Brown was entitled to have all the-property owned by him at the time he conveyed the lot in
Error is assigned only upon the overruling of the demurrer to the complaint.
The objections to the complaint are:
First. That it did not aver the value of Brown’s real estate at any time.
Second. That it did not allege that Brown had no other real estate besides the lot sold to Ullery.
Third. That it did not show that Brown had no other real estate at the time the transcripts were filed.
Fourth. That it did not allege that the defendants had ever issued executions on their judgments, or that they had ever attempted or threatened to enforce their judgments against the lot iii question, or that they even knew of the existence of the lot.
Fifth. That it did not state the value of Brown’s personal property at the time of filing the complaint.
Sixth. That it did not assert a demand and a refusal by the defendants to relinquish all claim against the lot conveyed to Ullery.
This proceeding was, in some of its features, a novel one, but it was undoubtedly within the power of the circuit court to grant the relief demanded if the facts relied on were sufficiently well pleaded to justify it in doing so. If the object sought had been simply to have an amount of property, not exceeding in value the sum of $600, set off to Brown as exempt from execution, it might have been well objected that another and a different method of proceeding had been expressly provided, and one to which Ullery was not a proper party; but the purpose had in view in this case was much more comprehensive in its scope. Its claim for relief rested upon equitable principles recognized, but not declared, by statute.
The circuit court might, with propriety, have required the complaint to be made more certain and specific in some respects ; but we regard it as fairly inferable from the averments of that pleading that, for the three months immediately preceding the conveyance of the lot to Ullery, Brown was the owner only of the lot and of $223 worth of personal property, and that both did not exceed in value the net sum of $600, and that this condition of things existed at the time of the conveyance.
Conceding this condition of things to have existed at that time, and for near three months previously, as we construe the complaint to have substantially averred, the recording of the judgments in the clerk’s office did not create any lien upon the lot.
Property exempt from execution is unaffected by execution liens, and may be sold or exchanged even while writs of execution are in the hands of the proper officer. Freeman Executions, section 197; Godman v. Smith, 17 Ind. 152; Taylor v. Duesterberg, 109 Ind. 165.
The material inquiry, therefore, as to the value of Brown’s property had relation to the time of the conveyance, and not to the time of the commencement of this suit.
For these reasons the averments as to the issuance of executions on some of the judgments, and as to the filing of certain schedules of his property by Brown, were immaterial to the essential matter of inquiry concerning the value of Brown’s property.
No demand was necessary to the maintenance of this action. The appellants had filed transcripts in the clerk’s office, and had thus placed themselves in a position to proceed against Brown’s real estate whenever' they might choose to do so.
The circuit court did not, as we believe, err in overruling the several demurrers to the complaint.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs. .