67 Tenn. 420 | Tenn. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
Collier, a constable of Humphreys county, levied an execution upon and took in his possession a horse, and cow and calf, as the property of defendant. She replevied the animals, and upon an agreed state of facts, submitted to the Judge of the Circuit Court of Humphreys county, he decided in favor of said Naomi, and Collier appealed to this court.
The facts agreed are, in substance, that the levy was valid and the seizure lawful, unless the property was exempt from execution, as being the only property of the kind owned by said Naomi. It was also agreed that defendant Was a widow, whose husband had been dead eleven years; that she had children, but they were, at the time of the levy, all of full age, and had married and left their mother, leaving her living on the place or farm where she had resided at the time of and ever since her husband’s death, he being the owner of the farm at the time of his death, and that she had cultivated the farm every year since her husband’s death up to the time of the levy; and that she is still living on the place, occupying one room for herself, which is rented out for the present, ■and the horse seized was, by her contract, to be used in making the crop; that the farm was her only means •of subsistence, and the contract for renting was made •when the property was seized; that none of her chil
But these provisions are cited as showing the policy of the statutes upon the subject of exemption to give the widow its benefits, even if there be no children and all these exemption laws, it has been often held by this court, are to be construed together as different parts of one act, and are to receive at the hands of' the courts a broad and liberal construction, so as to favor the remedy intended by the Legislature. Accordingly, it has been held that a widowed daughter, residing with her father, and eating at the same table, whose children also lived with her at her father’s, and cultivated part of his farm, was the head of a family within the meaning of the exemption laws. 3 Hum., 213.
Upon like reasons, and for similar purposes, it has-also been held by this court, in a recent case, that a jackass is a horse within the meaning of said acts.. 1 Heis., 333.
In the case cited in 3 Hum., referring to a New