after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The statutory provision in relation to homesteads was enacted by Wisconsin in express compliance with a constitutional injunction, wherein it is declared, in the seventeenth section of the Bill of Rights, that “ the privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary Comforts of life shall be recognized by wholesome laws.”
Phelps
v. Rooney,
It has been the constant policy of the State in this legislation, as construed by many decisions of its Supreme Court, to favor by liberal interpretations the exemptions in favor of the debtor. “ For it cannot be denied,” says that court, in Hanson v. Edgar, 34 id. 653, 657, “ that in all. the enactments found ■in our statute books in regard to homestead exemption, the most sedulous care is manifest to secure the homestead to the debtor and to his- wife and family against all debts not expressly charged upon' it.”
We have found no case in which the question has been raised, or where there has been any expression of judicial opinion, whether the exemption would prevail or not, as to judgments in favor of the State; but we do not doubt, from the language of the constitutional and statutory provisions, and the rules of construction followed in other cases, that it would be held by its courts, if the question should be directly made, that the State, except as to taxes, which are expressly excepted, would be bound by the exemption.
In
Doe, ex dem. Gladney,
v.
Deavors,
Mr. Thompson, in his Treatise on Homesteads and Exemptions, sect. 386, says: “ In many of the States this question is determined by the express provisions of statutes, which declare, in various terms, that nothing shall be exempt from execution where the debt, other than public taxes, is due the State; or where the debt is for public taxes legally assessed upon the homestead or other property ; or where the demand is for a public wrong committed, punished by fine. But where the question has arisen, in the silence of statutes, the highest courts of the States, with two exceptions, have held otherwise.”
Commonwealth
v.
Cook,
It is said, however, that the laws of the State creating these exemptions aré not laws for the United States; and this is certainly true, unless they have been made such by Congress itself. This has not been ah open question in this court since the decision in
Wayman
v.
Southard,
The question, therefore, is, whether the United States, by an appropriate legislative act, has adopted the laws of Wisconsin exempting homesteads from execution, and, if at all, whether they apply in cases of executions upon judgments in favor of the United States.
Sect. 916, Rev. Stat., is as follows: “ The party recovering a judgment in any common-law cause in any Circuit or District Court, shall be entitled to similar remedies upon the same, by execution or otherwise, to reach the property of the judgment debtor, as are now provided in like causes by the laws of the State in which such court is held, or by any such laws hereafter enacted which may be adopted by general rules of such Circuit or District Courts; and such courts may, from time to time, by general rules, adopt such State laws as may hereafter be in force in such State in relation to. remedies upon judgments as aforesaid, by execution or otherwise.”
This provision.is part of the sixth section of the act of June 1,1872, e. 255, entitled “ An Act to further the administration of justice,” and has in its present form been in force since that day. It is the result of a policy that originated with the organization of our judicial system. The fourteenth section of the act of Sept. 24,1789, c. 20, commonly known as the Judiciary Act, provided that the courts of the United States should have “ power to issue writs of
scire
facias,
habeas
corpus, and all other writs not specially provided for by statute, which maybe necessary for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions, and. agreeable to the principles and usages of law; ” and this was held to embrace executions upon judgments.
Wayman
v. Southard,
This act was temporary, and expired by its own limitation at the end of the next session of Congress. The act of May 8, 1792, c. 34, provided • that the forms of writs, executions, and other process, and the forms and modes of proceeding in suits at common law, should continue to be the same as authorized by the act of 1789, “ subject, however, to such alterations and additions as the said courts respectively shall in their discretion deem expedient, or to such regulations as the Supreme Court shall think proper, from time to time, by rule to prescribe to any Circuit or District Court concerning the same.” This legislation came under review in this court in
Wayman
v.
Southard
and
Bank of the United States
v. Halstead, in the latter of which it is said,
This discretionary power in the courts of the United States was restricted by the act of May 19, 1828, c. 68, so that thereafter writs of execution and other final process issued on judgments rendered in any of the courts of the United States, and the proceedings thereupon, should be the same, except their style, in each State respectively, as were then used in the courts of such State ; provided, however, that it should be in the power of the courts, if they saw fit in their discretion, by rule of court, so far to alter final process in said courts as to conform the same to any change which might be adopted by the'legislatures of the respective States for .the State courts.
It will be seen from this provision that.it was thereafter prohibited to'the courts of the United States either to adopt or recognize any form of execution, or give any effect to it, except such as was, at the time of the passage of the act, or had sub *279 sequently become at the time of tbeir adoption, a writ authorized by the laws of the State. The same provision has ever' since been continued in,force, and is now embodied in sect. 916 of the Revised Statutes, already quoted.
In Beers v. Haughton, 9 Pet; 329, which was governed by the act of 1828, it was held that “ the words, ‘ the proceedings on the writs of execution and other final process,’ must, from their very import, be construed to include all the laws which regulate the rights, duties, and conduct of officers in the service of such process, according,to its exigency,. upon the person or property of the execution debtor, and also all the exemptions from arrest of imprisonment under such process created by those laws.”
It is further to be' observed that no distinction is made, in any of these statutes on the subject, between executions on judgments in favor of private parties and on those in favor of the United States. And as there is no provision as to the effect of executions at all, except as contained in this legislation, it follows necessarily that the exemptions from levy and sale, under executions of one class, apply equally to all, including those on judgments recovered by the United States. The general power to issue process, originally conferred by sect.-14 of the Judiciary Act of '1789, which now appears as sect. 716, Rev. Stat., as .being in pari materia with that contained in sect. 916, must be construed as subject to the same limitations, especially as the general power is confined in express terms to writs not specifically provided for by statute, and' hence, ex vi termini, embraces none included in the subsequent section. Besides, as was said by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, in Wayman v. Southard, “ this section provides singly for issuing the writ, and prescribes ho rule for the conduct of the officer while obeying its mandate.”
As the statute of Wisconsin, exempting homesteads from levy and sale upon executions, was in force at the time the act of Congress of June 1, 1872, c. 255, took effect, and has remained so continuously from that time, it also follows that the exemption has thereby become a law of the United States within that State, and applies to executions issued upon judgments in. civil causes recovered in their courts "in their own *280 name-and behalf, equally with those upon judgments rendered in favor of private parties. Laws of Wisconsin for' 1848, pp. 40, 41; Rey. Stat. Wisconsin for 1871, § 23, p. 1548.
This conclusion cannot be avoided by the consideration which has been urged upon us, that the process acts do not limit the sovereign rights of the United States, upon the principle that the sovereign is not bound by such laws, unless he is expressly named. These laws are the expression of the sovereign will on the subject, and are conclusive upon the judicial and executive officers to whom they are addressed; and as they forbid the issue of an execution in every case, except subject to the limitations which they mention, and as there is no authority to issue' an execution in any case whatever, except as conferred by them, the sovereign right invoked is left without the means of vindication. The United States cannot enforce the collection of a debt from an unwilling debtor, except by judicial process. They must bring a suit and obtain a judgment. To reap the fruit of that judgment they must cause an execution to issue. The courts have no inherent authority to take any one of these steps, except as it may have been conferred by the legislative" department; for they can exercise no jurisdiction, except as the-law confers and limits it. And if the laws in question do not permit ah execution to issue upon a judgment in favor of the United States, except subject to tbe exemptions which apply to citizens, there are no others which confer authority to issue any execution at • all. For, as was said by Mr. Justice Daniel, in
Cary
v.
Curtis,
This objection is also met expressly by the decision of this court in
United States v. Knight,
■ The same line of. reasoning was adopted by this'court in
Green
v.
United
States,
And although it has been decided by the highest judicial tribunals in England —
Feather
v.
The Queen,
6 B. & S. 257;
Dixon
v.
London Small Arms Co.,
1 App. Cas. 632 — that the sovereign is entitled-to the use of a patented process or invention without compensation to the patentee, because the privilege granted by the letters-patent is granted against the subjects only, and not against the crown, a contrary doctrine was held by this court in
James
v.
Campbell,
It is true that in
United States
v. Herron,
If a contrary construction to the process acts should be given, on the ground that they do not include the United *284 States, which, although a litigant, continues nevertheless to exercise the prerogatives of a sovereign, it would follow that they might resort to any writ known to the common law, however antiquated or obsolete, and in defiance of the progress of enlightened legislation'on that subject, revive all the hardships of imprisonment for debt, even without the liberty of local statutory jail limits. But that this is not within the meaning of these acts of Congress, we have positive and plenary proof in sect. 1042 of the Revised Statutes. This was sect. 14 of the act of June 1,1872, c. 255. It provides that “when a poor convict sentenced by any. court of the United States to be imprisoned and pay a fine, or fine and cost, or to pay a fine, or fine and cost, has been confined in prison thirty days solely for the ■ non-payment of such fine, or fine and cost, such convict may make application in writing to any commissioner of the United States court in the district where he is imprisoned, setting’ forth his inability to pay such fine, or fine and cost, and after notice to the district attorney of the United States, who may appear, offer evidence, and be heard, the commissioner shall proceed to hear and determine the matter; and if on examination it shall appear to him that such convict is unable to pay such fine, or fine and cost, and that he has not any property exceeding 'twenty dollars in value, except such as is by law exempt from being taken on execution for debt, the commissioner shall administer to him ” an oath, the form of which is set out, in which he swears that he has not any property, real or personal, to the amount of twenty dollars, except such as is by law exempt from- being taken on civil precept for debt by the laws of .the State where the oath is administered, and that he has no property in any way conveyed or concealed, or in any way disposed of, for his future use or benefit. “ And thereupon,” the statute proceeds, “ such convict shall be discharged,” &c. This section is repeated as sect. 5296, Rev.' ■Stat., under the title, Remission of^Snes, penalties, and forfeitures.
Nothing can be more clear than this, as a recognition by Congress that in case of executions upon judgments in civil actions the United States are subject to the same exemptions ' as apply to private persons by the law of the State in which *285 the property levied on is found ; and that, by this provision in favor of poor convicts, it was intended, even in cases of sentences for fines for criminal offences against the laws of the United States, that the execution against property for its collection should be subjected to the same exemptions as in civil cases.
In Magdalen College Case, 11 Rep. 66 b, Lord Coke, referring to Lord Berkley's Case., Plowd. Com. 233, 246, declares that it was there held that the King was bound by the statute De Bonis, 13 Edw. I. c. 1, because, for other reasons, “ it was an act of preservation of the possession of noblemen, gentlemen, and others,” and “ the said act,” he continues, “ shall not bind the King only, where he took an estate in his natural capacity, as to him and the heirs male of his- body, but also when he claim's an inheritance as King by his prerogative,” By parity of reasoning based on the declared public policy of States, where the people are the sovereign, laws which are a.cts of preservation of the home of the family exclude the supposition of any adverse public interest, because none can be thought hostile to that, and the case is brought within the humane exception that identifies the public good with the private right, and declares “ that general statutes which provide necessary and profitable remedy for the maintenance of religion, the advancement of good learning, and for the relief of the poor, shall be extended generally according to their words; ” for civilization has no promise that-is not nourished in the bosom of the secure and well-ordered household.
Becree affirmed.
