94 N.C. 23 | N.C. | 1886
There was a judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed.
The facts are fully stated in the opinion. The plaintiffs' attorney, on their behalf, sued out of the (24) Superior Court of Greene County, and on December 30th, 1884, placed in the hands of R. A. Edwards, a deputy of the defendant Luby Harper, acting sheriff of the county, an execution against John T. Parker, issued upon a judgment recovered by the plaintiffs against him in the sum of $25.70, with interest from December 9th, 1881, and costs, and duly docketed in said court, with direction to lay off the defendant's exemption, and proceed to collect. The deputy accordingly summoned appraisers, who, on December 31st, laid off the debtor's personal property as exempt from execution, and of the value of $150, and returned a descriptive list of the exempt articles on January 5th, 1885, into the office of the Superior Court Clerk, who made a minute thereof on the judgment roll in the action, and the same was duly registered. There were omitted from the allotment two mules and a wagon, the ownership of which the debtor disclaimed, as he had conveyed this property by a mortgage, which, in the argument, it was said had not been registered. Thereupon the plaintiffs' attorney directed the deputy to seize and sell these articles, which he did seize, and the debtor demanded that his personal property exemption be laid off. Accordingly, the deputy again called the same appraisers together, and *50 they again made out a descriptive list, including the mules and wagon, and the officer made return of the process to the office on January 12th, 1885, with the following endorsement: "Executed by levy upon the personal property and setting apart to him his personal property exemption. No excess and no other property out of which to satisfy this execution belonging to the defendant to be found in my county. January 12, 1885."
The deputy, when required, refused to sell the mules and wagon, or any one of them, to satisfy the writ, and to recover damages for this neglect and alleged breach of the conditions of the sheriff's official bond, the present action is brought against him and the other defendants who are the sureties thereon.
(25) The matters in controversy upon the pleadings, are embodied in three issues, of which two were offered by the defendants, and the third added by the Court; those proposed by the plaintiffs having been refused:
1. Did John T. Parker demand that his personal property exemption be laid off, before the commissioners first laid it off?
2. Did he demand that his personal property exemption be laid off before the commissioners laid it off the second time?
3. Did he select the articles laid off to him the second time?
The jury responded in the negative to the first and third issues, and in the affirmative to the second.
The subject matter of contest before the jury, was whether the allotment of exempt articles was first made by the debtor's demand, or was the voluntary act of the appraisers, done by the direction of the plaintiffs' attorney, upon which its efficacy as a legal allotment was supposed to depend; and here the principal objection to the ruling insisted on, is the validity and conclusive effect of the first allowance, omitting the articles embraced in the list, and its operation, while remaining undisturbed, as an estoppel upon any further similar action of the sheriff and appraisers.
The finding of the jury shows that the debtor did not require his exemption to be set apart until it was done and the list made to include the mules and wagon, all in value falling short of the limit fixed in the law. Const., Art. X, Sec. 1.
The argument for the plaintiffs, appellants, is, that the first action of the appraisers, completed by their report and its registration, was final and exhaustive of their powers as such, and that what was afterwards done is a nullity, thus leaving the unmentioned articles open to execution.
The provision contained in Sec. 504 of The Code, slightly modified in terms, but in substance the same as before its adoption, directs the *51 proceeding by the appraisers, when ended, to be returned by the officer to the Clerk, for filing with the judgment roll, etc. This direction seems to contemplate a return of the proceeding for exemption with his return of the process to which it is incidental and explanatory. (26) It would be unjust to a debtor to prevent the officer, at the dictation of the creditor only, to appoint the inspectors, and cause their action taken immediately upon the delivery, to be at once transmitted to the Clerk, and thus as an estoppel, to bind the debtor and take away his constitutional rights. We think the debtor is entitled to have his exemption ascertained up to and just before the process is executed by a sale. While the process is in the officer's hands in full activity, the preliminary action of the appraisers is not conclusive, but remains infieri, capable, at their instance, under the call of the officer at lease, of correction and amendment. If property has been omitted, which ought to have been put on the list, but was not known at the time to belong to the debtor so that it could be done, the appraisers ought to have the power, and we think do have it, to enlarge the exemption, so that none which should be exempt shall be sold from him. The mandate of the statute is, that the officer shall make his levy upon the entire personal estate subject to seizure under execution, but before he sells, to have so much of it set apart for the debtor, within the limited value, as he may select, and when insufficient, all being below the value, such selection is unnecessary.
The conclusive effect given to the action of appraisers in Burton v.Spiers,
While the unregistered mortgage of the mules and wagon may be effectual between the parties to it, and yet inoperative against the plaintiffs for want of such registration, in the controversy between the plaintiffs and the defendant the right of the latter (27) prevails, and the non-registration cannot subject to a sale under execution, that which, if no mortgage had been made, would not be, because of its exemption. Duvall v. Rollins,
As the sheriff could not legally sell the property thus exempted, there has been no breach of his bond and no dereliction of duty in the premises, and the ruling of the Court must be sustained.
There is no error and the judgment must be affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.
Cited: Rankin v. Shaw,