45 Fla. 306 | Fla. | 1903
This cause was referred by the court to its late commissioners for investigation, who reported that the decree of the Circuit Court from which the appeal was taken ought to be reversed.
On July 25th/1896, appellant sued out a writ of attachment against the. appellee John D. Crabtj and another, and on August 12th, 1896, levied the writ upon a stock of liquors, bar fixtures, pool tables and horse and buggy of said Crabb, at Cocoa, Florida. Grab!) made oath that this was the whole of his personal property and demanded his exemption of $1,000 in personal property, whereupon the property was appraised, its value fixed at $554.40, and the property set aside" by the sheriff as exempt from levy and sale. Judgment was recovered in the attachment suit, and after execution returned unsatisfied, appellant filed a bill to subject to its execution the said personal
The facts upon which this relief was asked, as shown by the pleadings and evidence in the case, are that the attachment of appellant was sued out on July 25th, 1896; on July 31st following, the defendant deposited in bank in. the name of his wife some $900 cash which he had in hand from his saloon business; on August 12th the writ was-levied upon the stock and fixtures belonging to said business, which the next day were released as exempt as above stated, and on the same day, as alleged in the answer of defendants, both the money above mentioned and the property belonging to the said business were turned over to the wife, and the business thereafter conducted in the name of John D. Crabb, agent; the money then on deposit in the wife’s^ name, and not included by Crabb in the list of his property given in, in claiming liis exemption, was $952; the wife was to pay $709.65 debts due by the said;saloon business from the money and property which she received. The business was thereafter conducted by J. 1). Crabb under the name of J. 1). Crabb, agent, he spending most of his time in Cocoa where the business was, and his wife continuing to live in Titusville. In January, 1897, the real estate now sought to be subjected to the satisfaction of the execution of complainants which was the property in which, the saloon business was «inducted, was purchased in the name of Mrs. Crabb for $1,500, $500 of which was paid in cash from the receipts of the said saloon business, and a mortgage given for the remaining $1,000. There is no pretense that the transfer-of the money and other property to Mrs. Crabb on August 13th was made otherwise than as a gift, made in order-
The Circuit Court denied the relief prayed and dismissed the bill, from which decree complainant appeals. We think the decree of the court below was erroneous.
As was said by this court in the case of Drucker v. Rosenstein, 19 Fla. 191, “the provisions of the homestead laws should be carried out in the liberal and beneficient spirit in which they were enacted, but at the same time .great care should be taken to prevent them from becoming the instruments of fraud.”
Under section 2003 of the Revised Statutes, a debtor wishing to claim his exemption “shall point out the whole '.of his personal property to the officer making the inventory, and shall make affidavit that the inventory made by such officer contains a true and perfect list of all of his personal property.”
At the time Crabb was allowed to claim as his exemption the whole of the property levied upon by the sheriff, valued at $554.40, he had $952 in cash in the bank, covered under his wife’s name. In the affidavit which he made in claiming his exemption he stated that the list of the property levied upon and which did not include this money was a correct inventory of his personal property at Cocoa, Florida, and in his answer he stated that the money was omitted from the inventory because he did not know, it. was personal property.
We think that where after the issuance of a writ of attachment a debtor is slioAvn to have concealed part of his
This rule does not conflict with those authorities which hold that the right to exempt certain chattels specified by statute is not lost by the concealment of other property which is subject to levy. In those cases the property concealed, not being the subject of exemption under the statute. can not be regarded as selected as such exemption, and these courts say that to hold that such fraudulent conduct on the part of the debtor will deprive him of the right to claim as exempt that property which is specifically so declared in the statute, would be to import into the statute a condition which the law-makers have' not authorized. Moseley v. Anderson, 40 Miss. 49; Megehe v. Draper, 21 Mo. 510; Elder v. Williams, 16 Nev. 416; Comstock v. Bechtel, 63 Wis. 656, 24 N. W. Rep. 465; Bates v. Callender, 3 Dak. 256, 16 N. W. Rep. 506; Sanborn v. Hamilton, 18 Vt. 590. This does not militate against the rule which we follow, under a constitution which exempts property to a certain value, - regardless of
The decree to be rendered is not affected by the fact that at the time the money of Crabb was turned over to his wife his saloon business owed some $700, which was after August 13th paid from this money and the receipts of the business; nor by the fact that part of this indébtedness was for the purchase price of some of the goods seized by the sheriff. A debtor may in selecting his exemption take that property which is least encumbered and most surely exempt from all claims, but he can, not exempt enough to enable him to prefer and- satisfy purchase money creditors and have his full exemption remaining.
The real estate purchased from Wooten is also sought to be subjected to appellant’s execution. The property was purchased some months after the saloon business of Crabb had been transferred to the name of Crabb, agent, and the bank account put in his wife’s name, and was bought with the proceeds of the business. If the business was bona fide that of the wife, the property so acquired was not subject to payment, of the husband’s debts, but here no bona fide- transfer to the wife is shown. After the writ of attachment against Crabb issued, he transferred his money to his wife, and after claiming the rest of his property as exempt “turned over” that to her also, as he
There is not sufficient evidence to show that the household furniture claimed by the wife to have acquired by gift and purchase before complainant’s debt was contracted,- and at a time when he is not shown to have been in embarrassed circumstances, is subject to execution of complainant.
The decree'of the court below should be reversed, and decree entered in conformity with the views here expressed, and it-is so ordered.