83 N.W. 15 | N.D. | 1900
On and prior to December 20, 1888, one G. A. Ward was the owner of section 9, township 145, range 49, Traill county, N. D. His wife, Jessie S. Ward, owned the south half of section 10, same township; and one H. H. Hall, a son of Mrs. Ward by a former marriage, owned a half section adjoining, or in the immediate vicinity. The Wards resided on the southwest quarter of said section 9. Upon said section 9 there were at that time three interest-bearing mortgages, belonging to one Mrs. French, and which may be known as the “French mortgages.” The Wards and Hall had become indebted to- the firm of Paulson & Co., doing business in said county; and Paulson & Co. had obtained two small judgments against G. A. Ward, and had brought another action against the three parties to recover some $1,700. Other unsecured creditors were pressing the Wards and Hall. On said December 20, 1888, the Wards and Hall, by warranty deeds, transferred all their land to the defendant Daniel Patterson. These deeds were at once placed of record. They were in fact given as security; a defeasance being executed by Patterson at the same time, but not placed of record. Subsequently Paulson & Co. pro
The position of the defendant is that the southwest quarter of said section 9 was the homestead of the Wards, and that, as such, the judgments obtained against the Wards were no liens upon that tract; that the law so declared; and that no decree could make the judgments liens against the homestead, as it was expressly exempt from all forced sale upon execution. Therefore the sale to Patterson under the Paulson judgments passed nothing whatever, and plaintiff received no title under the sheriff’s deed, and the title still remains in G. A. Ward, and, the French mortgages being satisfied, the entire estate in the tract, legal and equitable, is subject to sale under Patterson’s foreclosure decree against the Wards. The defendant brought into court, and tendered for the use of plaintiff, the amount received by him upon the redemption from his sale of so much of said section Q as was sold in a lump with said southwest quarter; the amount being.$191. This contention requires an examination of our homestead law. Section 3605, Rev. Codes, declares: “The homestead of every head of a family residing in this state, not exceeding in value five thousand dollars, and if within a town plat, not exceeding two acres in extent, and if not within a town plat, not exceeding in the aggregate more than one hundred and sixty acres, and consisting of a dwelling house in which the homestead claimant resides and all its appurtenances and the land on which the same is situated shall be exempt from judgment lien and from execution or forced sale except as provided in this chapter.” The next section shows from what property the homestead may be taken. It reads: “If the homestead claimant is married the home
From these principles we think it follows that plaintiff did receive title under and by virtue of the sheriff’s deed, and that such title is superior to any rights of defendant Patterson under the foreclosure decree. But we reach the same conclusion for another reason: After the Paulson judgments had been obtained, executions were issued thereon, and levied upon this tract of land. Thereafter, and while the levy was in full force, an action was brought in aid of this execution, asking to set aside the deed to Patterson, and establish the judgment as a lien upon the land. G. A. Ward and Jessie S. Ward and Daniel Patterson were all parties defendant to that action. If this tract in question were in fact the homestead of the Wards, that defense would have been available to each and all of said defendants, because there cannot be, as to creditors, any fraud in the conveyance of exempt property. But, as stated, no such defense was suggested, and the relief prayed was granted. Now, one of the defendants in that action seeks to avoid a sale made pursuant to the lien established by that decree, by reason of a defense available to him, and which, if pleaded, would have defeated any decree. We think, on plainest principles, this cannot be done. In State v. Manly, 15 Ind. 8, an action was brought upon a constable’s bond to- recover, as in conversion, for property sold by the officer on execution which it was claimed was exempt from such sale. An action against the relator had been aided by attachment. He defended the action, but made no claim that the attached property was exempt. Judgment went against him, with thd usual order for the sale of the attached property. In deciding the case that court said: “The order for the sale of the property was a final judgment, beyond which the officer was not required to look, and behind which the relator could not go in order to assert his right to claim the property as exempt from sale. If the proper practice be for the officer serving the attachment, upon proper demand, to set apart to the debtor such property as may be exempt from execution, then he only returns, as attached, such as is not thus exempt, and such only is ordered to be sold upon final judgment against the defend