10 Ind. 54 | Ind. | 1858
This was an action by the appellee against
the appellant for the recovery of the possession of personal property.
There is no controversy about the property having been subject to the execution, and properly levied upon, if it was not exempt under the act to exempt property from sale, &c. 2 R. S. p. 336. Whilst the execution was in the hands of the officer, and the property in the hands of Myers, as owner, such writ was a lien upon his personal property in the county, and he had the right to claim it as exempt. His sale of such property did not divest the lien. Did it divest him of his right to claim it as exempt from levy and sale? But, first, did he make the proper claim, if any was necessary, before he sold? These are the only questions in the case.
The statute in force is as follows: “ That an amount of property not exceeding in value 300 dollars, owned by any resident householder, shall not be liable to sale on execution, or any other final process of a Court,” &c. 2 R. S. p. 336, § 1. Sections 5, 6, 7, and 8 of the same act provide for the appraisement of the property to be exempted,
“ If any execution-debtor shall claim property as exempted by virtue of this act, he shah elect whether he will claim personal, or real property, or both, and shall designate the property so claimed.”
The remaining sections of the act prescribe the duties of the officer in appraising, setting apart and selling property. It is insisted by the appellant, that property is not exempt until a claim to that effect is made by the proper person; and that such claim cannot be made until after levy. On the other hand, it is contended that the exemption is for the benefit of the family, and where there is less than 300 dollars worth of property, such exemption is not dependent upon the formality of a claim. We are referred to Mandlove v. Burton, 1 Ind. R. 39. That was an action by an execution-defendant against an execution-plaintiff and the officer who had the writ, for property levied on. The property had been fradulently transferred after the rendition of judgment, and before the execution issued, and the defendant disclaimed title at the time of levy. After levy, he claimed it as exempt under the act exempting 125 dol-' lars’ worth of property. The real question presented in the case was as to whether, under the circumstances, the execution-defendant could sue; but the following language is used by the Court: “ The circumstance that 125 dollars’ worth of this property, had it not been conveyed away, might have been retained by the grantor as exempt from execution, cannot, we think, alter the case. The possessor of such exempted property may, we suppose, sell it. If he do so, and it be subsequently levied on for his debt, the purchaser may probably reclaim it from under the execution, but we do not see where the seller could find title on which to rest a suit.” It is argued that the authority above quoted establishes, first, the absolute exemption of the property without its having been specifically designated or set off, and, secondly, that the property in the hands of the purchaser was exempt in the same manner it would
We think that the facts and circumstances admitted to have existed in this case, show that the execution-plaintiff and the officer had notice of the intention of the execution-defendant to claim the benefit of the exemption law. The failure to act upon the execution from the 12th of April until the 14th of August was, to a certain extent, an acquiescence in the justness of such claim, and, together with the admitted fact that he did not during such time possess 300 dollars worth of property, gave such defendant the right, when the property was so levied upon, to perfect his claim for the benefit of his vendee.
Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed with 1 per cent, damages and costs.