37 Wis. 269 | Wis. | 1875
This is an action of replevin commenced before a justice. The defendant, being under-sheriff, seized the property in controversy on a writ of attachment issued against the plaintiff. The writ in the present case was served upon the defendant by the sheriff. It'is claimed that the service of the process by the sheriff upon the under-sheriff was void, and gave the court no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant.
This objection must be overruled. It would have been more appropriate had the writ in the present case been awarded to and executed by some constable. Tay. Stats., 1384, § 160.
The court held that the property seized upon the attachment was exempt. It consisted of lath, shingles and lumber, of the value of $61.80, which the plaintiff had procured and placed 'upon the lot on which his dwelling house was situated.' The court found, as a matter of fact, that the land whereon these materials were placed was the homestead of the plaintiff, and that they were obtained with the intent and for the purpose of repairing his dwelling house. We think the testimony fully warrants this finding; and the question then arises, whether lumber and building materials procured by a debtor for the purpose of repairing the dwelling house in which he and his family live, and actually placed upon the lot. on which such dwelling is situated, are exempt. It seems to us this question must receive an affirmative answer. It is a cardinal rule, which this court has frequently recognized and affirmed, that exemption laws are to be liberally construed. The whole policy and spirit of the law, so far as homesteads are concerned, are to secure them to the debtor and his family. In
It is said that the complaint did not allege an unlawful taking of the property, and that there was no proof of a demand. The court found that the property was unjustly taken; and the complaint might have been amended so as to make it conform to the proof. The case must be treated here as though the proper amendment had been made.
It follows from these views that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court. —Judgment affirmed.