McClarin v. Anderson
This text of 104 Ala. 201 (McClarin v. Anderson) 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.
Opinion
[211]*211It appears to u's, that the demurrer filed by the defendant to plaintiff’s contest of said claim of a homestead exemption was sustained by the city court, from no defective pleading for the trial of that matter, that the facts upon which the exemption was to be allowed or not were well presented, and that the judgment of the court on the demurrer settled the question of defendant’s exemption in the property claimed, as long as the condition on which it was claimed remained the same. If he should abandon it, or do some act by which he waived or lost the exemption, or it should increase in value, so that he held more than the law allowed him as an exemption, it would be subject to other process. Block v. George, 83 Ala. 184; Smyth on Homestead Exemptions, § 91, and authorities there cited. One of the purposes of the statute is to give stability and security to the claimant in his home, to prevent the annoyance and feeling of insecurity that the issue of repeated executions . on the same judgment would bring, and to afford a speedy and summary remedy for the determination of the matters arising on claims of exemption, to the end that creditors, if they have any rights, may have them ascertained, and if not, that the claimant may be quieted in title and possession. — Block v. George, 70 Ala. 411.
From what has been said, it follows, that the claim of defendant to the homestead exemption, to the extent claimed, was adjudicated by the city court, and was not again liable to a second levy of an execution on the same judgment on the same land, while the conditions and the value of the property remained the same. It is unnecessary to discuss the further attempt to subject the property to this judgment by the issue of the second execution on it on the 17th of April, 1887. That matter seems never to have received the consideration and judgment-of the city court; but the judgment that it did afterwards' render, as touching the second execution, was that the defendant having filed his declaration of . exemption in the office of the probate' judge 'of ' Mobile county, ;on the 16 day of'June, 1885,"the levy, of date May 19th," 1887,' of the execution issued the 17th of April preceding was made by the sheriff without the plaintiff having filed with him a contest under oath, of said declaration of exemption — filed in the probate office — as required by l.aw, (Code, § 2520), and the proposed contest was, there[212]*212fore, dismissed. That left the matter, as to this suit, where it stood, at and since the rendition of said judgment on demurrer by the city court, of date 18th of April, 1887.
It is scarcely necessary to say, that the allegations of the bill, .make the deeds of conveyance referred to- voluntary, fraudulent and void as to complainant, to the extent he has an interest in and right to condemn any part- of said lands to the satisfaction of his judgmeut. Bibb v. Freeman, 59 Ala. 612 ; Early v. Owens, 68 Ala. 174; Seals v. Robinson, 75 Ala. 369 ; Dickson v. McLarney, 97 Ala. 383.
The demurrer went to the whole bill. The claim of exemption extended to only a part of the land sued on. The demurrer and the motion to dismiss for want of equity were each properly overruled for this reason.
Affirmed.
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