88 N.W. 706 | N.D. | 1901
This action was brought to recover the possession of personal propeiW of the admitted value of $850, which the defendant, as sheriff, seized on an execution issued upon a judgment against the plaintiff and her husband as joint debtors. The plaintiff, before instituting suit, demanded the property from the sheriff, as exempt property. At the close of the trial the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and upon the return of such verdict judgment was entered in favor of the defendant. A statement of the case was settle in the court below, but no motion to vacate the verdict or for a new trial was made in the trial court.
Counsel for appellant have assigned numerous errors upon the record, the last and most important of which is as follows: “The court erred in granting ,the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant.” At the threshold of the case \ye are met by an objection urged by counsel for the respondent to any consideration .of this assignment of error. As a basis for the objection counsel assume that the assignment requires the consideration of questions of fact, ■and upon this assumption counsel claim that this court cannot lawfully proceed to review the so-called questions of. fact, .for the reason that the appellant has ommitted to move for a new trial in the district court. In support of this objection counsel for repondent have cited numerous cases from other states, none of which, in our judgment are in point. The objection is untenable in this jurisdiction. The trouble with it lies in the assumption that the assignment of error involves a review of questions of fact. The assignment has reference to a ruling of the trial court made .during the trial of the action, and, if such ruling was erroneous, it was an “error of law occurring at the trial,” and would fall under subdivision 7 of § 5472, relating to new trials. Such rulings were classed as “errors of law” in the supreme court of the territory of Dakota, in which the rule in California was followed, and such has been the unvarying practice in this state. See De Lendrecie v. Peck, 1 N. D. 422, 424, 48 N. W. Rep. 342; Slattery v. Donnelly, 1 N. D. 266, 47 N. W. Rep. 375; Henry v. Maher, 6 N. D. 413, 414, 71 N. W. Rep. 127; Hayne, New Trial & App. § § 112, 114.
This brings us to a consideration of the merits of the assignment of error based upon the order directing a verdict for the defendant. This order of the trial court was granted upon a motion therefor made by the defendant’s counsel, and in their brief filed in this court defendant’s counsel concede that for the purposes of such motion it must be assumed that the evidence in the case was sufficient to establish all the material facts alleged in the complaint, excepting only the facts necessary to be established in order to place the plaintiff in a position to claim the benefits of the statute regulating exemptions of personal property; but as to this feature the contention of respondent’s counsel is that the testimony wholly failed. The trial court was of the opinion that the plaintiff had failed upon this feature of the case, and. the presiding judge stated in effect, in directing a verdict, that § 3625 limited the exemption to the head of a family, and that the statute provides that the husband is the head of the family, and that in this case
The legal problem presented for solution is one of no little difficulty, and we have reached our conclusions with some degree of doubt. Our chief difficulty arises upon the construction placed upon the language of said section 3625, supra, and this is occasioned by the very brief and meager language employed by the legislature in subdivision 1 of that section. This section is an innovation, in so far as it declares that the wife, when a claimant, is included within the meaning of the phrase “head of a family,” and the last part of the subdivision, which declares that "in no case are husband and wife entitled each to a homestead,” is obscure, in this: that such limitation upon the rights of married persons is by its terms confined to the family homestead, and means, of course, that in no case shall one family have more than one homestead which is exempt from seizure and sale on legal process. But no terms used in said subdivision warrant the conclusion that the legislature intended to limit the right of married persons to one, and only one, statutory exemption of personal property. If that was the legislative purpose, it must follow as a result of a construction of all the law bearing- upon the subject-matter of exemptions. Nor is the uncertainty in any degree removed by anything found ■ in section 55x6, which goes no further than to declare that personal property to an amount specified shall be exempt “to the head of a family as defined by chapter 39,” which chapter relates to homesteads, in which is found section 3625, wherein, as has been said, a wife is included within the meaning of the phrase “head of a famil)'.” It must be conceded that the language of the section last cited, when considered by itself, gives no preference to either the husband or the wife, and that it declares that the wife, as well as the husband, is included in the phrase “head of a family.”
But the practical difficulties of giving the language of subdivision 1 of section 3625 a literal construction are obvious. The statute is entirely silent upon the question of whether, in a case such as this, where both husband and wife are debtors, and claimants, one or both are entitled to an exemption and, if both, whether the total exemption is limited to the maximum of property or
In the case at bar the.husband, a joint debtor, has asserted a •claim for exemptions, and the sheriff has acquiesced in such claim and turned over to the husband the property claimed by him as •exempt from execution, and the whole thereof. With reference to this fact counsel for the plaintiff calls our attention to the fact that the aggregate amount, as claimed, respectively, by the husband and his wife, — the plaintiff, — -is less than the maximum amount of personal property allowed by the statute for the benefit of a family, :and as to this counsel say that it is inharmonv with the legislative
Our conclusion that the husband is primarily the head of the family rests not alone upon the laws of nature, nor upon the sanctions of the common law. It is in this state further reinforced by express statutory enactments. Section 2764 of the revision of 1899 reads: “The husband is the head of the family. He may choose any reasonable place or mode of living, and the wife must conform thereto.” Section 2765 declares: “The husband must support himself and his wife out of his property or by his labor. The wife must support the husband, when he has not deserted her, out of her separate property, when he has no separate property and he is unable -from any infirmity to support himself.”
The remaining questions for determination presented by the assignment of error.under discussion relate to the evidence and are relatively of little difficulty. It is quite clear from this record that plaintiff’s counsel deemed it necessary to show by testimony at the trial that the plaintiff, by reason of certain facts and conditions, had, from necessity, been placed in the relation of headship to her family; and a mass of evidence was put in by plaintiff for this express purpose, and the same is practically undisputed. Our duty is to consider this evidence, but to do so only so far as is necessary to decide whether there is an}'- competent evidence in the record reasonable tending to sustain all the' material facts necessary to sustain the cause of action alleged in the complaint. As already seen, the only fact which is not conceded to have been established is whether the plaintiff, at the time she demanded the property in dispute, was the head of her family. The trial court held that this vital fact had not been shown, and this court has reached the same conclusion. In doing so, we have put the most favorable construction upon the evidence offered upon this branch of the case. The facts shown by the evidence may be briefly stated as follows: Plaintiff and her husband have a family of eight children, all minors, save one. The family have resided many years upon a farm owned by the plaintiff, and the property in question consists of grain raised on the plaintiff’s homestead. In
Just here counsel contend that the husband, because of his financial straits, lost his original position of head of the Nes's' family, and for the same reason the plaintiff emerged from the background and appeared as the head of the family. We think this position is untenable. It would seem that, if a debtor ever needs the benefit of exemption laws, it is when he is in the greatest financial distress. If he has nothng save his hands with which to support his family, he should at least be permitted to hope that his first small acquisitions of property (acquired by manual labor) would not be seized to satisfy the demands of his creditors. Such property would be subject to seizure unless the husband claimed them as' exempt; and he could not maintain his claim if he had ceased to be the head of a family, by reason of financial reverses or for any other reason. The law as we construe it will tolerate but one head and one exemption for one family. If a policy more liberal than this is desirable, it can be inaugurated only by the legislative branch of the government. It is not the province of the courts Jo create exemptions in cases where the lawmaker has withheld, them. Nevertheless it is a fact of common experience, and one which is only toó familiar, that conditions sometimes exist in which the wife from dire necessity is compelled to assume the burdens and responsibilities which
We find no error in the judgment, and hence the same will be affirmed.