163 N.W. 558 | N.D. | 1917
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff sues to recover from defendants for the conversion of personal property alleged to be worth $612.50. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $550. The defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.
It appears that, under a writ of attachment and a judgment against the plaintiff for $355.75, the defendants levied upon and sold all of plaintiff’s household property, which was exempt from such levy and sale. The plaintiff was a resident of the state, and he duly claimed his exemptions.
By an appraisal made under the direction of the sheriff, the property was valued at $300. At a forced sale on execution it brought $366.75, and the evidence shows it was fairly worth about $450. Hence, it
Comp. Laws 1913, § 7168: “Tbe detriment caused by tbe wrongful conversion of personal property is presumed to be:
“1. Tbe value of tbe property at tbe time of tbe conversion, with tbe interest from that time.
“3. A fair compensation for tbe time and money properly expended in pursuit of tbe property.”
Sec. 7145: “In any action for tbe breach of an obligation not arising from contract, when tbe defendant bas been guilty of oppression, fraud, •or malice, actual or presumed, tbe jury, in addition to actual damages, may give damages for tbe sake of example and by way of punishing tbe defendant.”
In this case tbe defendants and their counsel knew, or ought to have known, that tbe property levied on was exempt. Tbe levy and sale was made in defiance or in disregard of tbe law, and it was manifestly oppressive. It was a gross abuse of tbe process of tbe law, and the plaintiff has been made a very considerable expense in trying to recover -the value of bis exempt property.
Under our statute when a debtor desires to claim exempt property by valuation, as per § 7731, then as per § 7733, be must make a schedule of all bis personal property of every kind, and deliver tbe same to tbe officer having tbe attachment. Tbe schedule must be subscribed and ■sworn to. Then, if there is any question in regard to tbe valuation being excessive, or if tbe property is in excess of tbe exemptions, tbe property must be appraised at tbe actual value of tbe several articles, .and tbe value of each article must be set down in tbe inventory or by lots, with tbe value opposite each article or set of articles, and, from -the appraisal so made, the debtor, bis agent, or attorney may select property to tbe amount exempt. When tbe total value of tbe property is confessedly less than tbe exemption, then tbe appraisement answers no purpose whatever; it becomes an idle act. And so it was in this ■case. Tbe sheriffs appraisal or valuation amounted to nothing, because there was no claim that tbe total value of tbe property was in excess of $500. Tbe valuation might have been put at $5 or $500, without
In an action for tbe wrongful sale and conversion of property on a writ of execution, no court has ever held that tbe sheriff’s appraisal was conclusive evidence of tbe value of tbe property. Tbe appraisal is made for tbe sole purpose of determining tbe exemption right, and it can be given no force or effect, only so far as it bears on tbe exemption right. Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). ' This is an appeal from a judgment for damages occasioned by tbe alleged unlawful sale of exempt property.
It is first alleged that tbe proof shows a waiver by tbe plaintiff of bis right to exemptions, and that tbe court erred in bis instruction,, that “you are further instructed that you should find from a fair preponderance of tbe evidence in this case that tbe plaintiff, Stringer, at any time before tbe sale of this property upon execution, to wit, on tbe 12th day of August, 1910, waived bis claim of exemptions, then you should find for tbe defendant.”
Tbe evidence shows that tbe plaintiff, Stringer, made a claim for exemptions on January 15, 1914. On January 28, 1914, be wrote to tbe defendant as follows: “How much of that furniture do- you fellows want, and what pieces do you want to satisfy 'your claims ? I will not let tbe range go, but I will let anything else go if you want to be reasonable.” It also shows that in reply to this letter tbe defendant. Elsaas wrote: “Will say that we are willing to let you have tbe range, providing you give us bill of sale on tbe rest of your furniture.” It also shows that no bill of sale was given, but that afterwards, and before tbe sale by tbe defendant under bis execution, tbe plaintiff made a redemand for tbe goods.
. There was clearly no waiver of tbe right to tbe exemption. There was no offer to relinquish tbe right as to all of tbe property but to tbe range only. Tbe offer was that tbe plaintiff would let anything go. It was not that be would let everything go. Tbe fact that tbe words, “if you want to be reasonable,” were added even to this offer, empba
Even as to this offer there was no acceptance, but merely a counter-proposal. It was that the defendant would let the plaintiff keep the range, provided that he gave a bill of sale of the rest of the furniture. This counter offer was not accepted, and there was, therefore, no contract. The redemand of the goods also, and the reassertion hy the owner of the claim for exemptions before the sale, reasserted the right, and must have made it clearly apparent to the defendant that the exemption was still relied upon.
I also agree with respondent that'where, in defiance and disregard of law, a party levies on and sells property known to be exempt, a jury may award exemplary damages. 11 E. O. L. 559; Comp. Laws, 1913,. § 1145.
I am satisfied, however, that the trial court erred in allowing plaintiff to testify in regard to the value of the goods in controversy, and that the report of the board of appraisers appointed at the instigation of the plaintiff was the best and only competent proof of the fact.
Section 208 of the Constitution merely provides that wholesome laws shall be passed “exempting from forced sale to all heads of families, a homestead, the value of which shall be limited and defined by law, and a reasonable amount of personal property; the kind and value shall he fixed by law.” Sections 7729 to 7743 of the Compiled Laws of 1913 put this constitutional provision into operation, and provide for the nature, extent, and mode of claiming exemptions. Except as allowed by those statutes, no exemptions exist. Sections 7734 and 7735 of the Compiled Laws of 1913 provide for the selection of appraisers when a claim for exemptions has been made, and prescribe the duties of such appraisers when chosen in the manner prescribed. The appraisers must take an oath “to truthfully and honestly appraise the property of the debtor.” The same must be “appraised at the actual value of the several articles,” etc. Section 7737 requires the sheriff or other officer having any process of levy or sale to make return with his writ or warrant of any inventory and appraisement of any such exempted personal property. The evident purpose of these enactments is to provide a speedy means of fixing the value of property claimed as exempt, and of making a permanent official record of such
We have carefully read the cases cited by counsel for respondent. The statement in 13 Enc. Ev. 567, that “the value at the time of asserting the right to hold it as exempt or at the time of trial may be shown,” is based entirely upon the case of Roden v. Brown, 103 Ala. 324, 15 So. 598. That case, however, was a direct contest of the claim for exemptions, the notice of the contest of the claim being “accepted by the attorneys of the debtor.” It does not appear that any appraisement had been had, or that any appraisement was provided for by the statutes of Alabama. In the case of Lynd v. Picket, 7 Minn. 184, Gil. 128, 82 Am. Dec. 79, the action was brought for an illegal levy on property especially declared by the statute to be exempt, and no question of appraisement or value as a basis to the right of exemption was involved. I do not at all see the applicability of 6 Enc. Ev. 558.
The other cases cited by counsel for respondent do not relate to claims for exemptions, but to levies by attachment merely, and where no such right was claimed or involved, and it must readily be seen that the situations are entirely dissimilar. In the case of an attachment, where no claim for exemptions is made, the appraisal is merely ' directed to be made for purposes of good faith and to prevent an excessive levy. The owner is not the moving party in such proceedings, nor does even the creditor base any right to the goods or to the lien on the fact of the appraisement or on their value. Section 7546 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, which relates to attachments, provides for an
In the case of a claim for exemptions, the case is very different. The law, out of its grace and bounty, reserves to the debtor certain property to a certain amount, provided that the provisions of the statutes are complied with. ' The appraisers are appointed by both parties and represent both parties. "While in the case of a mere attachment the debtor relies on his right to the property not necessary to the securing of the debt as a natural and fundamental right, in the case of- a claim for exemptions, the constitutional provision is not self-executing, and his rights are only such as the statutes allow.
Since there is nothing to show how much of the verdict was for exemplary damages, and how much was based on the value of the goods, I am of the opinion that the admission of the evidence was prejudicial, and that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial be had. -