13 F. Cas. 931 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas | 1871
In 1S04, the laws of the state of Kansas, in which the bankrupt had his domicile, contained and still contain the following provision in regard to the exemption of property: “Eighth, The necessary tools and implements of any mechanic, miner, or other person, used and kept for the purpose of carrying on his trade or
In argument, the counsel for the assignee contends that the order under review is erroneous, 1. Because Jones was a merchant, and not a mechanic or person such as is contemplated by the Kansas statute above quoted. 2. Because, conceding that Jones was entitled to the exemption, the right, although claimed before the sale, not having been recognized by the assignee or established by the court, is waived or lost. S. Because the mortgage upon the stock in trade destroys the right to the exemption, not only as against the mortgagee, but the assignee.
Neither of these positions is well taken. Jones, as a practical workman, not selling goods as merchants usually do, but manufacturing them for customers upon special orders, under his own superintendence, is fairly within the language and clearly within the purpose of the local exemption statute. That he did not do all "the work himself, but employed workmen, makes no difference. In the reverse he has met, he has need of the provision which the law makes, as much as if he had done business on a scale so small that he did all the work with his own hands.
As to the second position of the assignee, I remark that the exemption to the amount of $400 is a fixed and determinate right not dependent upon the discretion of the assignee or court. The assignee ought to have recognized this right when it was claimed by the bankrupt before the sale, and the right may be asserted against the proceeds of' the goods in the hands of the court for distribution.
As to the other point. The mortgagor does, as against the mortgagee, waive the exemption, but not as against the assignee, if there should be a surplus beyond the amount required to pay the mortgagee’s debt. The proposition that the mortgage absolutely destroyed the exemption, seems to have been the very one that was relied on in the district court. But the record here discloses the facts appearing in the statement, and it is suggested that the Leavenworth goods did not sell for enough to pay the mortgage debt, and hence there is no surplus as to those goods, and the Omaha goods having been out of the state, where the bankrupt was domiciled, cannot be considered as any part of his stock in trade within the meaning of the local exemption act.
It is true that the two stocks were mingled, and that it is impossible now to ascertain how much each portion brought at the sale. It does not appear from the record before me whether the mortgagee is entitled to a lien on the proceeds for the amount of his debt or not. But aside from these considerations, which would lead to an affirmance' of the order of his honor below, I am of the opinion that the Omaha stock, having been brought into this state and mixed with the other, without any fault of the bankrupt, the two should be taken as together constituting the stock in trade of the bankrupt within the meaning of the local exemption statute, and that out of this stock in trade he is entitled to claim and hold as exempt the amount of $400 in value. The order complained of is affirmed. Affirmed.