60 Fla. 320 | Fla. | 1910
The appellant brought a bill in equity in the circuit court for Hillsborough county against the appellees in which it is in substance alleged that the complainant is the head of a family residing in the State of Florida and as such is under the constitution entitled to an exemption of one thousand dollars worth of personal property; that complainant is possessed of no personal property in the State of Florida except his clothing and wearing apparel of a value not exceeding twenty-five dollars and a few carpenter’s tools of the value of five dollars except the money due to him by the defendant M. Julia Dickenson under a contract hereinafter mentioned; that on May 10, 1909, the complainant entered into a contract with said M. Julia Dickenson and her husband, whereby complainant agreed to erect for the said M. Julia Dickenson a certain building on lot 3 of block 3 in Washington Subdivision of the city of Tampa, the said premises being the separate statutory property of M. Julia Dickenson; that complainant completed the building and thereby said M. Julia Dickenson became indebted to him in the sum of $1,190.40 which still remains due and owing from her to him on account of the construction by complainant of the said building; that complainant constructed said building for the defendant by his personal labor and services and the said amount is due complainant for his personal labor and services in the construction thereof; that after the completion of said building certain creditors of complainant filed claims or instituted proceeding in the same court seeking to enforce liens against the premises for materials furnished to complainant, and. the defendant M. Julia Dickenson filed in the court a bill of interpleader to which the other defendants herein were made defendants, and in the bill of interpleader the said M. Julia Dickenson averred that there was due and owing, on account of the construction of said building, to complainant $1,179.60,
Section 2527 General Statutes of 1906 provides that “the circuit courts shall have equity jurisdiction to order and decree the setting apart of homesteads and of exemptions of personal property from forced sales.”
The constitution in section 1 of article X provides for an exemption from forced sale under process of any court, of one thousand dollars worth of personal property owned by the head of a family residing in this State, but expressly provides that no property shall be exempt from sale for the payment of obligations contracted for the purchase of said property.
It is alleged that the claims intended to be avoided are “for materials furnished to your orator,” which by necessary inference were used in the erection and construction of the building, and constitute a part at least of the amount due the complainant by M. Julia Dickenson “on account of the construction of the said building.”
The allegations that “your orator constructed the said building for the said defendant by his personal labor and services and the said amount is due your orator for his personal labor and services in the construction thereof,” do not rebut the conclusion drawn from the other allegations of the bill-of complaint that the indebtedness to the complainant is for the construction of the building including the material used therein. If this is so the exemption allowed the complainant does not extend to the payment of obligations contracted for the purchase of the material alleged by the complainant to have been furnished to him.
The complainant cannot have an exemption to him of amounts due by Mm to others for material furnished to him and used in the construction of the building for which
The decree appealed from is affirmed.