Lloyd v. . Durham
This text of 60 N.C. 282 (Lloyd v. . Durham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff had a right to exchange the gray mare, and the effect of the exchange was to vest in him the title to the sorrel mare; so she was his property; but the question is, Was she protected from execution? *Page 177
The plaintiff insists that as the gray mare was exempted, the privilege passed to the sorrel mare by the legal effect of the exchange; but the defendant insists that the privilege was personal to the gray, and did not attach to the sorrel.
The statute makes void any alienation of exempted property by the debtor, for the payment of his debts. He can sell or exchange it, but there is no provision that the article received in exchange shall be exempted from execution, and we see no ground upon which it is exempted by implication, as an effect of the exchange. On the contrary, we are of opinion that, by a proper construction of the statute, the sorrel mare was liable to execution as property acquired after the allotment. We are led to this conclusion, in opposition to the opinion of his (284) Honor, by two considerations:
If the effect of the exchange was to communicate to the newly acquired article the quality of being exempted from execution, it would be liable to abuse, and tend to defeat the policy of the statute in respect to the provision that the "other property" not enumerated shall not exceed in value the sum of $50 at each valuation; for example, if the debtor should exchange the property allotted for other property of the value of $100, by undertaking to pay the difference in cash or some other way, and the newly acquired property should be exempt from execution, the policy of the statute is defeated at once; but it would not stop there. If the property received on the first exchange acquired the quality of being exempt from execution, the same quality would be communicated to property received upon a second exchange, and thus the debtor would become an independent trader with privileged property ad infinitum. So, if a mare can be exchanged for a mare, she may be exchanged for a house, or for cattle, or a negro, or for land, and the same principle would apply. Thus any species of property acquired by exchange would be exempted from execution. In short, the courts can fix no limit to the number of exchanges or the kind of property. In this instance it was the first exchange — a mare for a mare — and we take it there was but little difference in value, and it may be, as suggested by Mr. Graham, that the motive was simply to exchange a young gray mare, which the man's children could not work, for a sorrel mare, which was steady and well broke; and if the Court had power to grant this indulgence to debtors, it would be disposed to do so in this case, but "hard cases are the quicksands of the law." The Court has no power to add to a statute; that is the province of the makers of the law; they can, if it be deemed expedient, allow this indulgence and fix a limit to it, so as to (285) guard against abuse.
There is another view of the subject. The statute requires a descriptive list of the several articles exempted to be made out and filed among *Page 178
the records of the office of the clerk of the county court. The object of this provision is to enable officers having executions in their hands to know with certainty what property was exempted. Dean v. King,
PER CURIAM. Error.
(286)
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60 N.C. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lloyd-v-durham-nc-1864.