27 Neb. 501 | Neb. | 1889
This is an application to this court, in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, for a peremptory writ of mandamus to respondent, who is the sheriff of Fillmore county, requiring him to appraise certain personal property which has been levied upon by him as the property of relator, in order that $500 worth of said property may be set off to relator as exempt in lieu of a homestead, it being alleged that he has neither lands, town lots, nor houses subject to exemption.
By the answer of respondent it is admitted that he is the sheriff* of Fillmore county, and that the relator is the-head of a family, a resident of this state, and that he has neither lands, town lots, nor houses subject to exemption under the laws of this state; but it is alleged that the suits, when originally instituted against relator for the purpose of procuring judgment, were accompanied by orders of attachment which had been levied upon the property, and that subsequent to such levy the causes were heard in court, at which relator appeared, and that he made no objection to the levy upon the property, by an effort to discharge the attachment or otherwise; that he consented to judgment being rendered against him, and that he is now estopped to insist upon the exemption.
This contention is based principally upon the cases of State, ex rel., v. Sanford, 12 Neb., 425, and State, ex rel., v. Krumpus, 13 Id., 321; but as the question here presented was pretty thoroughly examined and discussed in Hamilton v. Fleming, 26 Id., 240, recently decided by this court, in which the rulings in the two former cases were substantially overruled, it is not deemed necessary to rediscuss the question here, except so far as to say that, as we understand sec. 522 of the Civil Code, it is provided that the person entitled to the exemption may avail himself of the benefits of sec. 521, by filing an inventory, “ under oath, in the court where the judgment was obtained, or with the officer holding the execution, of the whole of the personal property owned by him or them at any time before the sale of the property,” and by so doing it becomes the duty of
That the suit instituted by Mrs. Stevens had proceeded to trial in the district court to a jury, when a verdict was returned and judgment rendered in favor of respondent, the defendant in the action, and that a supersedeas bond had been filed by Mrs. Stevens, and the cause taken by proceedings in error to the supreme court; that upon the trial of that case relator was called as a witness and testified that he had no interest whatever in the property; that it all belonged to Mi’s. Stevens, the plaintiff in that action. It is therefore now insisted that, having transferred the property to his wife, whether fraudulently or otherwise, and declared that he had no interest in it, and said action being still pending, the title to the property being virtually undecided, he is now estopped to claim the property as exempt to him, and insist upon the appraisement thereof.
In support of this contention a number of cases have been cited in the brief of respondent, all of which we have examined, but fail to find that they are in point. In
It appears from the answer that notwithstanding the relator had conveyed the property in question to his wife, and she brought an action against the sheriff for the conversion thereof, yet it was found upon the trial that the property in question did not belong to her, and the judg
The writ will therefore be allowed.
Writ allowed.