38 Vt. 209 | Vt. | 1865
The opinion of the court was delivered by
We think that no question necessarily arises in this case in respect to the validity of the attachment of the hay in controversy, made on the original writ in favor of Powers, the execu
The property was duly advertised by the officer for sale, but it is claimed that his adjournment of the sale was illegal. The statute
The plaintiff claims that the county court erred in the instructions given to the jury in respect to the homestead exemption to which Eli Jewett, the execution debtor, was entitled in the premises on which the hay in controversy was cut. The question in respect to the application and effect of this homestead exemption arises and is to be determined under the original act of 1849, (Comp. Stat., p. 390, chap. 65,) as the hay was cut in the season of 1861, while that act was in force. The homestead law contained in the General Statutes now in force is an entirely new act in respect to the same subject matter, which supplies many of the defects of detail, and clears up or obviates many of the perplexities and difficulties, imputed to the former act, but it has no application in determining rights which accrued before it went into effect. By the act of 1849, the homestead of the execution debtor, consisting of the dwelling house occupied by him as a homestead, out-buildings, and lands appurtenant, to the value of five hundred dollars, and the yearly products thereof, were exempted from attachment and execution and provision was made for ascertaining and setting out the homestead and its annual products when levied on or taken in execution, if the exemption was claimed by the execution debtor. In both statutes, the house-keeper or head of a family entitled to the homestead exemption is allowed the right to designate and choose the part of his real estate from which it is to be taken, and to which it is to apply, if the election is made at the time of the levy of the execution, but no mode is provided in either statute for ascertaining and setting out the annual products of the homestead except in a case in which the debtor, at the time of the attachment or taking in execution, makes a claim that such products are the products of his homestead. It does not appear that there was any such claim made by the execution debtor when the hay which is the subject of this controversy was levied on and sold. If the plaintiff purchased grass from the debtor which was the product of the homestead to which the debtor was entitled, it would stand like any other property exempted from attachment and levy on execution; tad in the case of such property, no change of posses-;
Judgment of the county court for the defendant reversed, and a new trial granted.