93 F. 423 | N.D. Ala. | 1899
M. Garden filed his petition in voluntary bankruptcy in this court, and was duly adjudicated a bankrupt. The schedule of assets filed with petition shows about $800 worth of property, all of which the bankrupt claims as exempt. The Birmingham Dry-Goods Company, a creditor- of the bankrupt, proved its claim in the cause, which claim was allowed; and it set forth an indebtedness of the bankrupt, due upon promissory notes in which there is a waiver of exemptions in due form. The creditor, the Birmingham Dry-Goods Company, moved to disallow the claim of exemptions made by the bankrupt, so far as its debt was concerned, which motion was overruled by the referee; and the correctness of this ruling is the question here presented for review.
The naked question is the right of a bankrupt to exemptions of personal property in the face of his waiver of exemptions contained in his note to his creditor, who has proved his claim in bankruptcy.
“This act shall not affect the allowance to bankrupts of the exemptions which are prescribed by the state laws in force at the time of the filing of the petition in the state wherein they have had their domicile for the six months or the greater portion thereof immediately preceding the filing of the petition.”
The question of waiver arises in connection with the question of exemptions, and for the rule upon this subject we are remitted to the state law in force in the state at the time when the petition in bankruptcy is filed. Article 10 of the constitution of Alabama treats of “Exempted Property,” and the first section provides:
“The personal property of any resident of this state to the value of one thousand dollars, to be selected by such resident, shall be exempted from sale on execution or other process of any court issued for the collection of any debts contracted since the 13th day of July, 1868, or after the ratification of this constitution.”
Subsequent sections are upon homesteads, not important here; and following is section 7, which provides:
“The right of exemptions hereinbefore secured may be waived by an instrument in writing, and when such waiver relates to realty the instrument must be signed by both the husband and the wife and attested by one witness.”
These are the provisions of the constitution of the state of Alabama; and the statute law upon the subject is more full, and furnishes details’ as to how these provisions shall be carried out. Article 5 of the Code of Alabama, under the head of “Waiver of Exemptions” provides:
“Any person by an instrument in writing may waive his right to an exemption in any property exempt from levy and sale under execution or other process.” '
So the subject of waiver is provided for in the constitution and laws of the state of Alabama; and not only so, but the mode and manner in which such waiver is to be carried out are clearly, and with detail, provided for by the statute law.
In the case at bar the creditor, the Birmingham Dry-Goods Company, filed its motion asking that the claim of exemptions of the said Garden be disallowed, as to the debt due to it, on the ground that the exemptions claimed by the bankrupt, Garden, had been waived, and that it was therefore entitled to the property, or its proceeds, to the extent of its debt. The question then is, what is the effect of the waiver? Is it of any force at all? It certainly was intended to be of force when it was given, and accepted by the creditor. It is even more than probable that without the waiver the note would not have been accepted, and that it (the waiver) was the main consideration upon which the note was accepted; and so, as between the parties, it was a contract founded upon a legal consideration. The argument on the bankrupt’s behalf is that the exemption of property from sale on legal process is the creature of the federal law, and that the state law is referred to only for the measure or quantum of the exemption, and that there is no question in the case about any waiver. How is it, then, that this question of waiver comes into the case? Under the law of Alabama, the matter of waiver of exemp