83 Ind. 522 | Ind. | 1882
Action by the appellant against the appellees, one of whom was sheriff, for the wrongful sale on execution of the appellant’s property in disregard of his claim to have the same exempted from sale.
The appellee makes the objection that it is not averred in the complaint nor shown in the evidence that the plaintiff was a resident householder at the time when his claim for exemption was disregarded. There is no direct averment nor direct evidence on the point. In the inventory or schedule which the appellant presented to the sheriff, and which is copied into the complaint and was put in evidence, he is described as a resident householder .of the county of Tippecanoe j but, besides this, there is no evidence or allegation of the fact.
The merits of the appeal depend on the question whether, under the execution by virtue of which his property was sold, the appellant was entitled to claim the exemption. The exemption allowed by the statute, R. S. 1881, section 703, is from “ sale on execution or any other final process from a court, for any debt growing out of or founded upon a contract, ex
The appellant insists that the occupant of real estate, holding during the year allowed for redemption from a judicial sale, holds under a conditional contract, created by force of the statute, to pay a reasonable rent to the purchaser in case there be no redemption from the sale; that the damages awarded in this case were for such rents, and consequently the judgment was for a debt arising out of contract, and the judgment debtor entitled-to claim the exemption in such cases allowed.
Whether the major proposition is true or not we need not decide. The evidence does not show, if evidence on the subject had been admissible, that rents for the year of redemption were included in the damages assessed. “ The court heard evidence as to the rental value of the premises sold,but presumably only for the time of the alleged unlawful detention.
The complaint in ejectment is clearly for a tort, and the damages which can properly be recovered in such an action-must be confined to the time of the tortious, holding. Such, damages arise from tort, not from coñtract, and against the execution upon a judgment for such damages no exemption can be allowed.
Where the complaint, upon which a judgment has been rendered, is unequivocal in respect to the character of the cause of action, there can not be an enquiry into the evidence adduced upon the trial for the purpose of admitting or excluding a claim for exemption.
If, therefore, it were conceded that the court went beyond the scope' of the complaint, and allowed as damages, in the-action of ejectment, rents and profits which were properly recoverable only in another action, the appellant, not having-saved his exception and prosecuted an appeal from the judgment, can not, for the purpose now sought to be accomplished, show that the judgment arose out of a cause of action different from the one declared upon.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.