Patterson v. Taylor

15 Fla. 336
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 15 Fla. 336 (Patterson v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Taylor, 15 Fla. 336 (Fla. 1875).

Opinion

RANDALL, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant, Patterson, appeals from the decree in this case, and alleges that the court erred in adjudging that the defendant, Taylor, could claim, in this proceeding to foreclose a mortgage upon personal property, that the property is exempt and not liable to be sold under a decree, the mortgagor being the head of a family and residing in this State; the mortgage.having been given to secure the mortgagee for advances made and to be made to enable the mortgagor to make his crop, which crop of corn and cotton were a part of the property mortgaged, the mortgage having been duly recorded; and in adjudging that the defendant, Randall, was entitled, notwithstanding the mortgage, to a large quantity of corn covered by the mortgage, which' was delivered to him by the mortgagor in payment for certain corn loaned by him to the mortgagor and on account of rent of the plantation, the landlord having no lawful lien upon it by mortgage or otherwise.

These questions are presented upon this record:

Is it competent for the mortgagor of personal property to set up against a bill for foreclosure that the property mort[341]*341gaged is exempt from sale to satisfy a debt secured by mortgage under the Constitution and laws of this State ? ; The Constitution says that “ one thousand dollars’ worth of personal property * * * shall be exempted from forced ■sale under any process of1 law.” Art. IX., Sec. 1.

There is no question that the owner of personal property may sell it for money, or to pay a debt, or dispose of his title to it in any other manner, provided the sale'be not made under any “ process of law.” Having this right to control and dispose of his property, has he the power lawfully to subject it to sale, by any process of law, by consenting thereto ? and, in such case, is such sale a “forced sale ?”

In the Court of Appeals of “New York, Mr. Justice Denio, delivering the opinion in Knettle vs. Newcomb, (22 N. Y., 249,) it is held that a promissory note, having annexed to it a stipulation “ waiving and relinquishing all right of exemption of-any property I may have from execution on this debt,” is void, because it is against the policy of the law exempting property from sale on execution, which law is designed for the protection of poor men and their families against the consequences of over-confidence on the part of the debtor and over-reaching on the part of the creditor, and because it would in effect give to an execution a greater power than is given to it by the law, and thus control the effect of the process. This has been the almost universal current of the decisions of the courts in this country with reference to such contracts; yet, says the court in that case, “one may turn out his last cow on execution, or may release an equity of redemption, and he will be bound by the .act.”

In Texas the law, like ours, exempts certain property from “forced sale” upon process of law; and the courts of that State have uniformly held that a sale by virtue of any judgment or decree, founded upon a mortgage of the property, is a forced sale within the meaning of the exemption laws and of their constitution, and is therefore prohibited.

[342]*342In California it is provided that the exemption from forced sale, on execution or other final process, “ shall not extend to any mechanic’s, laborer’s, or other lien lawfully obtained, nor to any mortgage or other lien lawfully taken or acquired to secure the purchase money for said homestead.” The term “ forced sale ” is used in the constitution as well as in the statute. The Supreme Court of that State, in Peterson vs. Hornblower, (33 Cal., 266,) says: “ The several homestead acts were enacted to give effect to this provision. A ‘forced sale’is not synonymous with a sale on execution. The latter may be, and often, is, voluntary in every respect. * * * Its quality, as being voluntary or forced, depends not on the mode of its execution, but upon the presence or absence of the consent of the owner. If those terms were synonymous, or were so understood by the Legislature, the provision would have been that the homestead shall not be subject to sale under execution -or other legal process. As the clause now stands, and with the interpretation contended for, no meaning or effect can be given to the word ‘ forced.’ The meaning of a sale on execution or other final process is plain, and needs no interpretation; and the word ‘ forced,’ unless it is to be rejected as insensible, must qualify the phrase with which it is connected. If' it is rejected from the statute, it must have the same fate in the clause of the Constitution directing the enactment of the statute. But we think there can be no question that enforced sale means a sale against the will of the owner. It is apparent, upon reading the whole act in connection with the constitutional provision, that it was not the intent, either of the framers of the Constitution or of the Legislature, to prevent the owner or owners of the homestead property from voluntarily alienating, changing, or otherwise affecting it. The homestead was not forced upon him, but he was at liberty to avail himself of its protection or not at his election, and if accepted, to waive it at his election — the consent of his wife, if he was a married man, being required in [343]*343order to secure to her.also the protection of the homestead exemption. *’ * It makes no difference, in respect to its being forced or voluntary, whether he consents-directly to the sale or does the same indirectly by consenting to or doing those acts or things that necessarily or usually eventuate in a salé. A foreclosure sale, whether under a power of sale contained in the mortgage or in pursuance of a decree, is not a forced sale within the meaning of the Constitution or the statute.” See also Chamberlain vs. Lyell, 3 Gibbs, Mich. R., 448.

The language of our Constitution, in respect to the exemption of real and personal property, is, that it “ shall be exempted from forced sale under any process of law,” but, in reference'to real estate, it “shall not be alienable without the joint consent of husband- and wife, when that relation exists.” Of course this condition, the consent of the wife, is not required in the sale or other alienation of personal property.

It is held in Texas that any sale by means of the process of a court is a forced sale. The courts of that State agree that the exemption laws are designed to protect the man and his family in the enjoyment of the property necessary to their comfort, and against privation and poverty; and yet they hold that if a mortgage contains a power authorizing the mortgagee to sell and convey the homestead without the aid of the process of a court, it may be enforced and the law is satisfied. The prohibition, is that the mortgagee shall not have the aid of a court to enforce the contract. This is according to the letter of the law as they construe it, and the result is that the humane provisions of their exemption laws are rendered null by the simple device of foreclosing a mortgage by means of a power of sale contained in the mortgage.

There is nothing in our Constitution to prohibit the Legislature from changing the law relating to foreclosing mortgages hereafter executed, so as to authorize the mortgagee, [344]*344upon default of payment, to.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Fla. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-taylor-fla-1875.