67 Wis. 147 | Wis. | 1886
If the real estate which the defendant owned at Sullivan station was bis homestead, the proceeds thereof remaining in his hands when he answered in the supplementary proceedings were exempt from seizure, and he could not lawfully be compelled to pay the plaintiff’s judgment out of the same. That he constantly intended to use as much as $1,400 of such proceeds in the purchase of another homestead, satisfactorily appears from the uncon-troverted statements in his answer. This renders the money exempt by virtue of the statute if the Sullivan property was a homestead. E. S. sec. 2983. That he used a portion of such proceeds to pay his debts and maintain his family does not deprive him of the right to such exemption if he is otherwise entitled thereto. Neither is it material that the sale of the Sullivan property included personal as well as real property, and was for a. gross sum. The defendant stated in his answer that the house and furniture were worth $2,000, and that the furniture was worth $300. This would make the house worth $1,700, without regard to the balance of the realty. It is clear enough from the whole answer that the defendant received more than $1,400 for the realty, and he has the right to hold the $1,400 in his hands as the proceeds of the sale of the realty alone.
The fact that a public alley crossed the land, cutting off from the rest a small parcel, on which stood the barn, does not defeat the homestead right to that parcel if the balance was a homestead. The fee to the alley was in the defendant, subject only to the public easement or right of way over it, and the whole of the real estate constituted but a single parcel, notwithstanding such easement.
Hence the controlling question in the case, and the only one which requires any further discussion, is, Yfas the Sullivan real estate the homestead of the defendant, under the exemption laws, before and at the time he sold the same in August, 1884? The learned commissioner and circuit court
Unless the orders of the commissioner and circuit court can be upheld on the ground above suggested, they cannot stand. This brings us to the question, Do the -words “ used for agricultural purposes,” as employed in the statute, exclude the appellant from the benefit of the homestead exemption therein given? To ascertain the literal meaning, of the -words “ agricultural purposes ” resort must be had to the lexicons for definitions of “ agriculture.” Webster tells us (accurately enough, no doubt) that it is “ the art or science of cultivating the ground, especially in fields or in large quantities, including the preparation of the soil, the planting of seeds, the raising and harvesting of crops, and the rear
But we do not think the statute should receive a literal construction. Our constitution contains an imperative mandate to the legislature to enact exemption laws. It is ordained in art. I, sec. 17, of that instrument, that “the privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary comforts of life shall be recognized by wholesome laws, exempting a reasonable amount of property from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt or liability hereafter contracted.” This provision wras inserted in the constitution for the benefit of all resident debtors, and an exemption law which protects only certain classes of debtors, leaving others unprotected, would not be a compliance with the constitutional mandate. The enactment of a homestead exemption law was absolutely essential to the proper execution of such mandate, because, without it, in many cases debtors would fail to realize the full benefits which the framers of the constitution, and the people who adopted it, intended they should receive under the exemption laws which the legislature was required to enact. Many personal property exemptions would be comparatively valueless to a debtor unless his homestead is protected from seizure. Moreover, a home is one of “ the necessary comforts of life,” in the enjoyment of which the legislature was required to protect every debtor.
The homestead exemption law, above quoted, was enacted
The fisherman may build his home upon the barren beach, using his land only for the spreading of his nets and the mooring of his vessels; or the hunter may build his home in a forest, and make no use whatever of his land appurtenant to his dwelling except to pass over it; yet we entertain no doubt whatever that the legislature intended, by the enactment of sec. 2988, to protect these men by exempting their homesteads from seizure for debt. The same is true of the present case, where the debtor used his lands appurtenant to his residence exclusively in connection with his hotel business.
It would be a gross imputation upon either the intelligence or honesty of the legislature — indeed of many legislatures— to say that in this case, and in the cases of the fisherman and hunter above suggested, no exemption was intended, but that if either of these owners should raise a bushel of beans or other produce annually upon his land, or pasture a cow upon it, then in such case an exemption was intended.
The first homestead exemption law was enacted in July, 1848, at the first session of the legislature after the adoption of the constitution. It has been amended from time to time, but those provisions which affect the question under consideration have remained unchanged to the present time. The law has frequently been before the courts for construction.
We are of the opinion, and so hold, that the practical construction above mentioned is the true one, and hence that the defendant’s Sullivan property was exempt from seizure and sale for his debts while he owned it. Eor reasons above stated the proceeds of the sale thereof were also exempt when the orders in question were made by the commissioner and circuit court, respectively.
To support these conclusions it is not essential that we define the precise signification of the phrase “ used for agricultural purposes,” as employed in the statute. It is sufficient to show that it cannot properly be construed or defined in a way that will exclude any debtor who owns and occupies a homestead in this state from the benefit of the exemption given by the statute. This we have endeavored to show. It may be suggested, however, that inasmuch as lands outside of villages and cities are usually agricultural lands, and when occupied are chiefly used for agricultural purposes, the phrase may have crept into the law of 1848 as a mode (although perhaps an awkward one) of expressing the distinction between city or village property, in respect to which the exemption is limited to one fourth of
By the Court.— The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to that court to reverse and set aside the order of the court commissioner requiring the defendant to pay to the receiver the amount of plaintiff’s judgment, together with the costs, out of the proceeds of the sale of his homestead at Sullivan.