Parsons v. Evans

145 P. 1122, 44 Okla. 751
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 22, 1914
Docket3522
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 145 P. 1122 (Parsons v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. Evans, 145 P. 1122, 44 Okla. 751 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

SHARP, C.

This is an action in replevin filed February 8, 1910, by J. P. Evans against W. H. Parsons, a constable, to recover certain personal property, most of which had on February 5th, prior thereto,'been taken from the possession of the plaintiff by defendant, by virtue of an execution issued out of a justice court in the case of J. W. Howard against J. P. Evans; judgment having been obtained against the defendant in that action-, who is the plaintiff in the present action. After describing the property sought to be recovered, which consisted of ten hogs, two horses, two cows, one buggy, one set of harness, and *753 about 50 bushels of corn, all of which was alleged to be exempt under the laws of the state, plaintiff in his petition asked for damages in the sum of $100 for the wrongful detention of said property. With the exception of four hogs taken under the execution, three of'which belonged to the tenant of plaintiff, living on the farm from which the property was taken, the other one not being claimed as exempt, and two horses, the property replevined was identical with that taken under the execution. The hog and two horses not claimed as exempt in the present case were sold by defendant in satisfaction of the execution, to which plaintiff herein made no objection. On the same day that the action in replevin was filed, the writ issued to the sheriff, which the latter executed on February 9, 1910, by levying upon and taking said property into his possession. On March 10th following, defendant filed his answer to the petition of plaintiff, denying generally the allegations contained therein, and on December 7th thereafter filed an amended answer, which contained the following additional defenses:

“(1) This defendant admits that he was in possession of the property described in plaintiff’s petition.
“(2) That said possession was by virtue of an execution issued out of the justice court of T. J. Hawley, a justice of the peace of Byron township, said county and state, and levied upon said property; that said levy was made subject to a certain mortgage of said plaintiff in favor of the Bank of Cherokee, Okla., and that, at the time of said levy, the property described in plaintiff’s petition was in the possession of said mortgagee.
“(3) That upon demand of said plaintiff for the possession of the property described in said petition, claiming said property by reason that same was exempt under the laws of this state, this defendant immediately delivered the property to said plaintiff and has not at any time made-claim to said property since said date.”

Trial was had December 9th and resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $5 and costs. Motion for a new trial, being filed, was sustained July 26th, 1911, defendant filed a second amended answer, in which the further de *754 fenses were set up that the ten hogs replevmed were turned over to plaintiff as soon as selected from the fourteen taken under the execution, and that, as to the other property, it had never been in the possession of defendant under the execution issued in the case of Howard against Evans, but instead was in the possession of one D. B. I-Iarrison, for the Bank of Cherokee, which' at the time held a mortgage on it. The second trial resulted in a verdict for $25, and judgment was rendered accordingly. Motion for new trial having been overruled, the case is brought here on appeal.

The defendant by his amended answer having disclaimed right of possession to the property, and conceded it to be in plaintiff, the court very properly instructed the jury that the only questions to be determined by them were whether the property was wrongfully detained by defendant before being released, and, if so, the amount of damages suffered, if any. The principal question for our determination is whether the defendant wrongfully detained the property, or any part of it, from the plaintiff. This involves other considerations, namely: (1) Is it a duty of an officer, when levying an execution, to inform the debtor or his agent of his statutory exemption rights; (2) is the statute self-executing, or must the debtor claim the exemptions allowed him; and (3) how, if necessary, should he make his claim?

We find -nothing in the statutes making it the duty of an officer, when levying an execution, to inform the debtor of his right to exemptions. Section 6405,'Comp. Laws 1909 (section 5484, Rev. Laws 1910), provides that the execution for the enforcement of a judgment before a justice of the peace must be directed to a constable of the county, who shall collect the amount of the judgment from the personal property of the debtor, etc. Section 6451, Comp. Laws 1909 (section 2075, Rev. Laws 1910), gives a constable, in serving process and doing his duties, generally, the same authority and power over goods and chattels as is granted by law to a sheriff under like process issued from courts of record. Section 5972, Comp. Laws 1909 (section 5156, Rev. *755 Laws 1910), names the property upon which execution shall be levied, etc. Unless, then, the duty of the constable, or other officer, to inform the debtor of his right to exemptions can be inferred from the statute granting such exemptions (section 3346, Comp. Laws 1909; section 3342, Rev. Laws 1910), we must conclude that it is not imposed upon him. This statute reads in part:

“The following property shall be reserved to every family residing in the state exempt from attachment or execution and every other species of forced sale for the payment of debts, except as hereinafter provided: [Naming different classes of personalty exempt.]”

Doees this statute of itself sufficiently set apart, from all personal property that a resident of the state may own, so much thereof as is specifically exempted thereby, so that, before it can be taken under execution, the officer of the law must inform the debtor of his right to retain it? Or, continuing, can it be said that specific amounts of the property exempted are placed beyond the reach of an execution in any case? Both of these questions, we think, should be answered in the negative. The statute plainly states the duties of an officer, such as sheriff or constable, and how such duties shall be performed, but nowhere includes that he shall legally advise a debtor whose property he may be about to subject to an execution; Discussing this question, it is said in Wells on Replevin (2d Ed.) sec. 269:

“An officer with execution is not bound to consult with the execution debtor as to what property is exempt, but he may seize and proceed to sell any or all the debtor’s property upon which he can lay his hands; and, if the debtor desires the protection of the statute, he must invoke its aid. It does not operate unless its shelter is sought. When exempt property is levied on, the debtor ought, at the time, or seasonably thereafter, to specially claim the benefit of the exemption-; he cannot sustain replevin for property he has not selected and claimed as exempt. So, when a certain amount of a particular kind of property is exempt, the debtor must select and claim or in some lawful manner assert his rights. If the sheriff levy execution on the whole of that class of property, the debtor cannot sustain replevin until he select and demand the exempted portion.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 P. 1122, 44 Okla. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-evans-okla-1914.