33 Fla. 715 | Fla. | 1894
Appellee filed a bill in chancery against appellant and the sheriff of Bradford county to enjoin the sale of personal property levied on by virtue of a distress warrant to collect rent alleged to be due appellant. The injunction prayed for in the bill was granted, to continue in force until the further order of the court, and after answer filed a motion was made to dissolve the injunction on bill and answer. The motion to dissolve the injunction was overruled, and from this ruling the respondent, Mary E. Hodges, appealed.
' The bill contains many allegations of matters of which a court of chancery has no jurisdiction, and we do not deem it necessary to set them out in this opinion. As no objection was made to the sufficiency of the pleadings, we will consider no allegations therein except those relating to appellee’s right of exemption in and to the property seized under the distress proceedings. The theory of the bill is that the complainant, appellee here, is entitled to the constitutional exemption of one thousand dollar’s worth of personal property out of the property seized under the- distress warrant. Chapter 3246, laws of 1881, confers upon the Circuit Courts “equity jurisdiction to enjoin the sale of all property, real and personal, that is exempt from forced sale under the Constitution and laws of the State of
The relation between appellant and appellee, as, shown by the written contract between them, a copy-of which is attached to the bill and not questioned by-the answer, was, we think, that of landlord and ten-, ant. The lease of the premises therein described was. for live years, beginning on the first day of January, 1885, at a yearly rental of six hundred dollars, evidenced by five promissory notes, due respectively January first, 1886, January first. 1887, January first, 1888, January first, 1889, and January first, 1890, and the claim for rent alleged to be due under this lease on the 10th day of October, 1889, when the distress, warrant was issued, was $1,446.22. • The property levied on under the warrant consisted of horses, mules, cattle, hogs, wagons, cart, buggy and harness, farming, implements, corn, fodder and cotton, gathered and ungathered, a steam saw-mill and machinery attached, a grist-mill, cotton gins and a cotton press, a lot of sawed lumber and a stock of merchandise consisting of dry goods, groceries and medicines. All of the property levied upon was found on the leased premises except about thirty-three head of cattle, one wagon and one cart, and this part- of the property was found on another place. Appellee was the head of a family residing in this State, and claims that he is entitled to hold one thousand dollars’ worth of the property levied on exempt from sale under the distress proceedings, and this is the only question we need consider in determining the correctness of the court’s ruling in refusing to dissolve the injunction.
* It is contended by counsel for appellee that the right to claim the constitutional exemption as against a demand for rent has been decided by this court in the case of Cathcart vs. Turner. A careful examination of that case will -show that it can not be regarded as a •direct adjudication of the point. It is true that in that ■case the distress warrant was levied upon agricultural products, and also on some “household goods,” and as to the household goods the opinion says that the claimant, “if he is entitled to claim the benefit of any exemption of property 'from forced sale on any process of law1 he can lawfully claim them as exempt from
The appellee on the showing made was entitled to-his personal property exemption to the limit of one-thousand dollars’ worth in the personal property other than agricultural products levied upon by the sheriff, and the court did not err in refusing to dissolve the-injunction restraining the sale until the further order of the court adjudicating such exemption right. This is the only question arising on the appeal involving the correctness of the order refusing to dissolve the injunction, and the decree of the court below must be affirmed. Ordered accordingly.