Madera v. Holdrege

4 Colo. App. 126
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Colo. App. 126 (Madera v. Holdrege) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madera v. Holdrege, 4 Colo. App. 126 (Colo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This judgment was evidently entered on a misconception of the privilege and the duty of the exemption claimant, of the authority and responsibilities of the officer under the writ, and of the proper construction of the exemption statute. There [130]*130is considerable conflict in the cases concerning the duty of the claimant with respect to the assertion of his rights of exemption, and the powers of the officer with reference to the seizure of property. So far as those questions arise in this case, the particular principle involved has been settled by the supreme court, and we need not look farther for authority on which to declare the law. As a general proposition, it is established that the officer may enforce his writ against whatever property he finds in defendant’s possession, whether he be serving a writ of attachment or a writ of execution, unless the only property which the defendant has subject to levy is within the protection of the exemption statute. The earlier case undoubtedly declared the law to be that the duty rested upon the defendant to claim the exemption if he desired to insist on it. The subsequent decision draws a distinction between the case where the only property owned by the defendant is clearly within the statutory limit, and a case where the defendant has other property subject to levy. The later decision holding that, in the first instance the levy is illegal, and in the latter that the defendant must assert his rights. Behymer v. Cook, 5 Colo. 395; Harrington v. Smith et al., 14 Colo. 376.

These authorities do not state when the right of selection shall be exercised, nor when the claim shall be made; but since under some circumstances the claimant must make his selection,-the rule adopted in those cases which impose the duty on the claimant is the only one which can be followed. In general, those authorities state that the selection may be made, and the notice concerning it may be given at any time prior to sale under the process by which it was taken. Of course the rule would be the same in attachment as after judgment — although in the former the right to exercise the privilege would probably continue until the final entry, and an attempt to sell under the execution. Thompson on Homesteads and Exemptions, § 839; Freeman on Executions, §§ 211 et seq.

In this case it is fairly deducible from the record that the [131]*131defendant had other property than the horse which was seized. Since this is true, it follows that the officer had a light to take the property into his custody, and it thereupon devolved on the claimant to assert his rights, aud notify the officer that this particular horse was selected by him as a work-horse, and claimed as exempt under the statute. This the appellee did, and his notice was entirely regular, and it became the duty of the officer on receipt of it within a reasonable time thereafter to return the property to the custody of the attachment defendant. The importance of this statement will be recognized when it is remembered that the officer holding the first writ {Metcalf) undertook to discharge this duty, sent the horse back and tendered it to Holdrege, who refused to receive it. No right of action could have accrued to Holdrege as against Metcalf under this state of facts, for if the law cast upon him the duty to exercise the right of selection, and likewise gave to the officer holding the writ the right to seize the property, it necessarily follows that the right of return must accrue to the officer upon the service of the notice of the demand, and that this return if made or tendered would relieve him from liability to treble damages under the statute. Thus far the case is plain, and seems to have been accepted, since no action was brought against Met-calf for an illegal seizure. The case is nearly as plain under the facts which surround Madera’s connection with the transaction. When the horse was returned and tendered to Holdrege, and tied to the wagon for the purposes of surrender, Metcalf’s rights as officer under his writ were gone, and it was incumbent upon Holdrege to resume possession, and no right of action had then accrued to him for trespass for the taking. At this point, Madera, who held the second writ, was doubtless in error in the assertion of his powers thereunder, and the court was in error in its instruction on this subject. When Madera left the property with the defendant,, under Metcalf’s instructions, he undertook to compel Holdrege to turn out other property for the satisfaction of the process which he held, and when this was not done, he as[132]*132serted a right to retake the exempt animal into his possession. In this he was clearly wrong. There is no known principle of law under which an officer can force a person against whom he holds a process to aid him in discovering property, nor can he use his process as a club for the purposes of extracting tire information. If it happens that at the time he attempts to make his levy, the property which he is about to seize is exempt under the statute, the defendant may insist on his rights, and his negiect or his refusal even to point out other property will not clothe the officer with the power to take that around which the statute has thrown its protecting arm. It may be that this principle is not absolutely universal, and that if the defendant had two horses find fraudulently concealed one to prevent the service of the writ on it, claiming the other as exempt — by which proceeding he would obtain the benefit of two horses in place of one — the law would uphold the officer in taking that which was in sight, though claimed to be exempt. This seems to be the ruling in the case of Yates v. Gransbury, 9 Colo. 323. But the present case furnishes no facts to which this rule can be applied. The court consequently erred when it stated the law to be that it was the duty of the defendant to turn over the other animals in satisfaction of the claim, and that he was without the right to insist upon the exemption until he had performed this duty.

Although this is true, no injury seems to have come to Holdrege by reason of the officer’s conduct, nor did any cause of action come to him by reason of it. He refused to take the horse when Metcalf returned it, and although it was probably, in the contemplation of the law, in his possession when it entered the yard, and the officer transcended his rights when he retook it into his possession, the legal status of the parties was settled by their subsequent proceedings. After Madera took the horse away, Holdrege served a written demand on him for its return, claiming his statutory privilege. The case shows that after this demand, though at what precise date cannot be determined, Madera took the horse back to [133]*133Holdrege’s place and attempted to redeliver it. He went to the yard, found the gate closed and asked Holdrege to open it that he might return the animal. Holdrege declined, and ahsolutely refused to receive it, and confesses on the stand in course of his testimony that Madera would have delivered the horse to him if he would have received it. Under these circumstances, it cannot be held that he had a cause of action against the officer for a trespass as for an illegal taking, unless the construction of the statute, which the court evidently adopted and on which counsel insists, is justified by its terms. We do not so conclude.

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Related

Behymer v. Cook
5 Colo. 395 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1880)
Yates v. Gransbury
9 Colo. 323 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1886)
Harrington v. Smith
14 Colo. 376 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Colo. App. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madera-v-holdrege-coloctapp-1893.