Kennedy v. Smith

99 Ala. 83
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 99 Ala. 83 (Kennedy v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Smith, 99 Ala. 83 (Ala. 1892).

Opinion

THORINGTON, J.

This is a summary proceeding under the statute, instituted by appellant against appellee, and the sureties on his official bond, as sheriff of Jefferson county; the grounds of the motion being that appellee, Smith, as such sheriff, failed to make the money on an execution in his hands in favor of appellant against one W. M. Nalls, which by due diligence he could have made.

Appellant’s attorneys, on placing the execution in the hands of the sheriff, required him to levy the same on certain machinery in Jefferson county as the property of said Nalls. The property being claimed by a third party, the sheriff demanded indemnity from appellant, the plaintiff in the execution, which being given, the levy was duly made. Within the time required by the statute the defendant in execution, W. M. Nalls, filed a claim of exemption with the sheriff, in which he claimed as exempt a debt of one thousand dollars due him by the firm of Nalls & Baker (of which defendant was not a member), secured by lien on the machinery levied on under the execution. The exemption claim described the machinery specifically, giving the value of each separate item, and claimed as exempt whatever interest the defendant in execution had in said property as security for his said debt of one thousand dollars, which claim was duly .verified by defendant’s affidavit and lodged with the officer before a sale of the property. Of the filing of this exemption claim the attorney of the execution creditor was duly notified.

At the time of the levy the sheriff also had in his hands an execution against the same defendant in favor of another judgment creditor, which was levied on the same property, ¿rfter the levy under the execution first above mentioned, and both executions were controlled by the same attorney and levied under his directions. A contest of the exemption [86]*86claim was duly filed by the attorney for the plaintiff in the second execution, but no contest was filed in the case in which appellant is the plaintiff in execution. After the lapse of ten days from the date of the levy under appellant’s execution, the sheriff released the levy, and delivered the property levied on to the defendant in execution. In his return to the City Court of Montgomery, whence the execution issued, it is stated that a contest was filed in that case, and that neither defendant nor plaintiff having given bond, as they were severally authorized by the statute to do, the levy was discharged by the sheriff, and the property delivered to defendant in execution; but the bill of exceptions shows that no affidavit of contest was in fact filed in this case.

Appellant’s attorneys, before the levy was so discharged by the sheriff, wrote a letter to such sheriff insisting that the claim of exemption was informal and void, and notifying him not to discharge the levy, also informing him of the pendency of certain chancery proceedings, to which the sheriff had been made a party, and in which a restraining order was sought to prevent him from selling the property, and which proceedings, the writer of the letter claimed, created a lien on the property, and'imposed on the sheriff the duty of holding the property subject to the Chancery Court’s decree. This letter is shown to have been duly-mailed, post-paid] but the sheriff testified that he has no recollection of having received or heard of it. It appears from the date to have been mailed at Montgomery to the sheriff at Birmingham on the same day the levy was released. Appellant’s counsel notified appellee to produce the original letter at the trial in this case, and on the failure of appellee so to do, appellant’s counsel offered in evidence a letter-press-copy thereof, to the introduction of which appellees objected, and the objection being sustained by the court, appellant reserved an exception.

It was shown by appellees that the sheriff endeavored to find other property of defendant in his county, but was unable to do so.

Appellant, on the trial, insisted that the claim of exemption was void, and that the sheriff should have disregarded it, and also that the value of the machinery being shown to exceed the amount of the debt claimed as exempt; the sheriff should have sold for such excess; and the charges asked in his favor and refused by the court are based on that contention. The court, at the request of appellees, gave the general charge in their favor,

[87]*87It has often been decided by this court, that the exemption laws, being founded in a spirit of humanity, are to be liberally construed, and that the words “personal property,” as used in such laws, have a comprehensive signification, and that they embrace everything which is the subject of ownership, not being realty or an interest in realty. — Enzor & McNeil v. Hurt, 76. Ala. 595. The debt due to the defendant in execution from Nalls & Baker for one thousand dollars was personal property within the meaning of section 2511 of the Code, and subject to the defendant’s claim of exemption. That this debt was secured by a lien on personal property worth more than one thousand dollars did not affect the defendant’s right to claim it as exempt. The lien itself is neither a jus ad rem nor a jus in re. It is neither a right of property in the thing, nor a right of action for the thing. It necessarily supposes the property to be in some other person, and not in him who sets up the right to the lien. The fact, therefore, that the defendant in the execution claimed, in addition to the debt of one thousand dollars, whatever right he had in the property to secure it, did not increase the amount claimed as exempt beyond the statutory limit of one thousand dollars. It added nothing whatever to the amount of the exemption claimed. Whatever the value of the property on which the lien existed may have been, the defendant could not, under his lien, have derived from the property more than the one thousand dollars. Had an excess over and above the debt been realized from the security, such excess would have been the property of Nalls & Baker, and not of W. M. Nalls, the defendant in execution.

We discover nothing in the testimony or record to support the contention of appellant's counsel, that the machinery levied on belonged to W. M. Nalls, the defendant in the execution. The mere fact that it was levied on under the execution as his property may have imposed a prima facie liability on the sheriff to the plaintiff in execution for the value of the property, not exceeding the injury the plaintiff might sustain from a discharge of the levy, but in the absence of other proof, we must accept the statement in the exemption claim, which was offered in evidence by appellant himself, that the only claim W. M. Nalls had upon the machinery was as security for his one thousand dollar debt, and this statement overcomes the prima facie liability of the sheriff above mentioned. If the defendant in the execution had any leviable interest in any other property in appellees’ county, the burden was upon appellant to prove [88]*88such fact, and that appellee Smith, as such sheriff, could, with due diligence, have made the money due on the execution.

The mere lien on the property in favor of the defendant in execution was not subject to levy and sale under execution, it not being “personal property of the defendant” within the meaning of the statute. — (Code, § 2892.)

The discharge of the levy by the sheriff did'not, therefore, work any harm or injury to the plaintiff in the execution.

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Bluebook (online)
99 Ala. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-smith-ala-1892.