McCue v. Tunstead

4 P. 510, 65 Cal. 506, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 613
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1884
DocketNo. 7,306
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 P. 510 (McCue v. Tunstead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCue v. Tunstead, 4 P. 510, 65 Cal. 506, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 613 (Cal. 1884).

Opinion

Sharpstein, J.

The court found in substance that the plaintiff was the owner and in the possession of a farm of about one hundred and fifty acres of land, which he cultivates for raising grain, etc., and that the horse, which this action was brought to recover, was used as a work horse on said farm— sometimes singly and sometimes doubly. It is also found that the plaintiff is the publisher of a weekly newspaper and the proprietor of patent medicines, although his main reliance for support is upon his farm, and almost the entire income from that is from the services of said horse as a stallion and the agistment of mares for breeding to him.”

The plaintiff is the owner of other horses pledged for a debt owing by him, and in the possession of the pledgee.

[507]*507In addition to “the farming utensils or implements of husbandry of the judgment debtor," the law exempts from execution two horses. (Code Civ. Proc. § 690, subd. 3.) The findings establish beyond doubt that the plaintiff employed this horse in husbandry. He was a farm horse in the same sense that the plows, harrows, and wagons used on the farm were utensils or implements of husbandry. And husbandry is the business of a farmer comprehending the various branches of agriculture. The plaintiff resided on a farm with his family, cultivated it, and mainly derived his support from it. Did not that constitute him a farmer ? The horse taken from him was one of two used in the tillage and cultivation of said farm. "We think the gender of the animal quite immaterial. His mate may have been of the opposite gender and chiefly valuable as a brood-mare. If so, it might be urged that she was not exempt, with quite as much force as it is now urged that the stallion is not.

On the questions of the value and gender of the horses used in husbandry, the Code is silent. It is restrictive as to the number and use only. If the plaintiff is engaged in husbandry he is entitled to the exemption of two horses, if the same be used by him in such husbandry, the value and gender of which are immaterial.

The findings of the court in our opinion establish two propositions, (1) that plaintiff is a farmer, and (2) that the horse which he claims as exempt, was one of two which he used on his farm in the cultivation and tillage thereof.

Judgment reversed, with directions to the court below to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the findings.

McKinstry, J., Myrick, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.

Ross J., dissented.

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Related

Sohner v. Mason
288 P.2d 616 (California Court of Appeal, 1955)
Security-First National Bank v. Pierson
38 P.2d 784 (California Supreme Court, 1934)
In re Johnson
149 F. 864 (N.D. New York, 1907)
Tunstead v. Nixdorf
22 P. 472 (California Supreme Court, 1889)
In re Mahon
12 P. 868 (California Supreme Court, 1887)
In re the Estate of Baldwin
12 P. 44 (California Supreme Court, 1886)
McCue v. Tunstead
6 P. 316 (California Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 P. 510, 65 Cal. 506, 1884 Cal. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccue-v-tunstead-cal-1884.