Greenhill's Adm'rs v. Oppenheimer

72 S.W.2d 1037, 255 Ky. 221, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 1037 (Greenhill's Adm'rs v. Oppenheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenhill's Adm'rs v. Oppenheimer, 72 S.W.2d 1037, 255 Ky. 221, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 200 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

*222 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming.

This appeal involves the time in which to assert a claim of, and also the right to, a homestead in real property sold under a judgment of court, sustaining the levy of an attachment, and the enforcement of an attachment lien, thereon.

C. F. Greenhill’s administrators sued Joseph , and Mary Oppenheimer in the Carter Circuit Court and recovered a judgment of $1,853.37. During the pendency of the action a general order of attachment against their property was issued and. returned' levied “on their home where they lived, known as the ‘Carter property.’ ” The return of the attachment also contains the boundary of “their home.”

A personal judgment by default was rendered, directing the sale of “their home” to satisfy G-reenhil1.’s debt. The judgment directed the sheriff to sell the property. In executing the judgment, he caused the property to be appraised at $2,000, without setting aside to the Oppenheimers a homestead as required by section 1703, Kentucky Statutes. To the sheriff’s report of sale the Oppenheimers filed exceptions in which they asserted their claim of homestead in the property reported sold.

In support of their exceptions, they averred:

“They are husband and wife and are each actual bona fide housekeepers with a family, resident in this Commonwealth on the property attempted to be sold herein consisting of a lot or parcel of land on which their dwelling house is situated and being the same property mentioned and described in plaintiff’s petition herein; that the alleged debt or liability claimed in plaintiff’s petition was created or incurred after the first day of June, 1866; that plaintiffs are not trying to foreclose a mortgage given by defendants or for purchase money due plaintiffs; that defendants have never given plaintiffs a mortgage and do not owe them any purchase money on said property; that the alleged debt or liability did not exist prior to the purchase of the land herein claimed as a homestead or the erection of the improvements thereon. Defendants say that they were present when said property was offered for sale by the sheriff and bid in by plam-.tiffs; that they publicly announced in the presence *223 of said sheriff and prospective bidders that they were claiming a homestead in said property; that said sheriff failed to pursue the direction given in section 1703 of the Kentucky Statutes or in any manner to. have their homestead allotted to them* * * * J ?

The question presented for our determination is not one of first impression. Section 1703 reads

“Before a sale under execution, attachment or judgment of land occupied as a homestead, the officer in whose hands the writ or judgment may be shall cause such part thereof, which may be selected by the defendant, as shall not exceed in value one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), to be valued under oath, and set apart to him by two disinterested housekeepers of the county, not related to either party, to be selected by the court or officer; and in case they disagree, the officer making the sale shall act as umpire.”

Section 1704 provides:

“The valuation so made shall be in writing, signed by the person making it and returned to the court directing it, or with the execution; and the officer must refer to and explain the proceedings in his return on the execution, which shall be recorded in full.”

In section 1705, it is stated:

“"Where the defendant in the execution, attachment or action owns real estate which is levied on or sought to be subjected to the payment of any debt or liability, and the same, in the opinion of the appraisers, is of greater value than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), and not divisible without great diminution of its value, then the- same shall be sold under ' the execution, attachment or judgment, and one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), of the money arising from the sale shall be paid to the defendant to enable him to purchase another homestead. But there shall be no sale if the land, when offered, does not bring more than one thousand dollars ($1,000.00).”

It must be noted and kept in mind that these sections deal exclusively with the sale of land under an execution, attachment, or judgment and actually occupied by the defendant as a homestead, and, whether the *224 sale is made under an execution, an attachment, or a judgment the failure or refusal of the officer in whose hands the writ or judgment may be for execution to observe their requirements, should not be permitted to deprive the owner and occupant of a homestead of his right under section 1703.

In Pinson v. Murphy, 220 Ky. 464, 295 S. W. 442, 444, an action was brought against Pinson and Yarney. They failed to answer, and a default judgment was rendered against them in accordance with the prayer of the petition. An attachment was procured upon filing of the petition which contained the ground therefor, and, upon rendering the default judgment, the ground of attachment was also taken! for confessed. The attachment was levied on a tract of land, jointly owned by Pinson and wife, and, after the default judgment, an order of sale, under the attachment, was made. Likewise an execution was issued upon the'judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff, who levied it on Pinson’s one-half interest in the land., The sheriff sold the farm according to his advertisement and reported the sale made under the execution levy. The sheriff caused the land to be appraised, but failed to have a homestead allotted therein to Pinson. On the return of the execution and report of sale thereunder to the clerk’s office, at the following term of court, Pinson filed exceptions to the sale, and at the same time entered a motion to have a homestead allotted to him in the property sold under the execution. His exceptions and motion were overruled, the sale confirmed, and the homestead denied him. On an appeal to this court, we said:

“It is the well-settled law, without exception, that a defendant in a default judgment confesses only such allegations in the pleading to' which he fails to'respond as is necessary to obtain the particular relief sought by the confessed pleading. Tne petition in this case, and which appellant confessed by his failure to respond thereto, had for its purpose the recovery of a judgment against appellant. The time for the employment of enforcement remedies had not yet arrived when the petition was filed and would not do so until the judgment was obtained, but which fact, however, would not preclude plaintiff, the creditor, from sequestering property of the defendant under attachment process for the purpose of maintaining the status quo and event-- *225 ually subjecting the property thus seized, if it should be found on final hearing that it was legally subject to the satisfaction of whatever judgment might be obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 1037, 255 Ky. 221, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenhills-admrs-v-oppenheimer-kyctapphigh-1934.