Ren v. Driskell

79 Tenn. 642
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 79 Tenn. 642 (Ren v. Driskell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ren v. Driskell, 79 Tenn. 642 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinion

Cooke, Sp. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1872 a judgment was recovered by the- State against the complainant and his sureties as tax-collector of Cocke county, for taxes due the State for the year 1869., which he collected, and failed to pay over as required by law. Execution was • issued upon this judgment, under which a tract of land was levied upon and sold by the sheriff, and purchased by the [643]*643respondents, Palmer and Driskell, who, after the expiration of the time for redemption, took a sheriff’s deed to the land, and instituted an action of ejectment against the complainant in the circuit court to recover the possession. Thereupon this bill was filed for the purposej among other things, of enjoining the action of ejectment, alleging that the complainant was the head of a family, was residing upon said land as his home at the time of said sale, and had so continued ever since; that he was entitled to a homestead in the land; that it had been sold in violation of this right, and seeking to have the same assigned to him, and the respondents perpetually enjoined from prosecuting their ejectment so as to interfere with this homestead.

The answer of the respondents denied the complainant’s right to homestead in the land upon several grounds, and alleged that if he were otherwise entitled to it, the complainant was estopped from setting up any homestead right, as against them, for the alleged reason that he had induced or encouraged them to become purchasers of the land without asserting any such’ right, but had indicated to them that he would not set up any claim to homestead in this particular land. A good deal of proof was taken.

The chancellor dismissed the bill, and the complainant has appealed.

While there were other questions presented by the record, the report of the Referees, and the exceptions thereto, present but two questions for our determination. The first and more serious one is, does the [644]*644homestead exemption contained in the act of March 12, 1868, ch. 85, secs. 2 and 3, operate against the State, so as to protect the complainant against a judgment for revenue due the State which he, as tax-collector, failed to collect and pay over as required by law.

This is a question of first impression in this State, and is not free from difficulty. It is a very ancient maxim of the English law that the sovereign is not bound by any statute if he be not expressly named therein, unless there be equivalent words, or unless the prerogative be included by necessary implication i Broom. Leg. Max., 72. Prima facie the law is made for the subject and not for the sovereign: lb. Yet this maxim admits of these broad exceptions, that “ if a statute is intended to give a remedy against a wrong, the king, though not named, shall be bound by it; and the king is impliedly bound by statutes passed for the public good, the preservation of public rights, and the suppression of public wrongs, the relief and maintenance of the poor, the general advancement of learning, religion and justice, or for the prevention of fraud: Broom. Leg. Max., 73; 1 Bla. Com., 261; 1 Kent’s Com., 460. In the United States the same principle has been held applicable to the Federal and State governments: 14 Pet., 315; 12 Bush., 283; 7 Ind., 50. “ It would seem,” says Mr. Thompson in his Treatise on Homestead, sec. 386, that an application of this principle to homestead and exemption laws in which the State is not expressly named, would result in the conclusion that [645]*645the State is not bound by such laws, especially where to so hold would contravene rights belonging to the State peculiarly to its political character, such as the right to collect revenue. In many of the States this question is determined by the express provisions of statutes, which declare, in various terms, that nothing shall be exempt from execution where the debt, other than public taxes, is due' the State; or where the debt is for public taxes legally assessed upon the homestead or other property; or where the demand is for a public wrong committed, punished by fine. See section above referred to and authorities cited. “But,” says the same author, “where the question has arisen in the silence of statutes, with two exceptions, the courts have held otherwise. The Supreme Court of Illinois holds that the statute protects a homestead from sale under a judgment rendered for a fine and costs in a prosecution for a misdemeanor. The same result was reached in Missouri,- but under a statute entirely dissimilar in terms. The act in question provided that the homestead therein defined should be “ exempt from attachment and execution except as hereinafter provided.” There was nowhere any proviso saving debts clue the State. The court held, in an ably reasoned opinion by Wagner, J., that “the statute protected the homestead from sale under an execution issued against the surety on a forfeited recognizance, although the debt in such a case was due to the State.”

In the Illinois case referred to in the above extract, Loomas v. Gerson, 62 Ill., 13, the learned judge delivering the opinion of the court, said: “ The ob[646]*646ject of these laws was to furnish a shelter for the wife and children which could not be taken away or lost by the act of the husband alone. This principle must equally exempt the homestead from sale under a-judgment for a fine and cost, rendered in a criminal prosecution for a misdemeanor.. The wife is not to suffer for the wrongful act of the husband. The State must submit to the’ same exemptions of a defendant’s property that it imposes upon its citizens.” See also State v. Pitts, 51 Mo., 133. In Illinois, a statute provided that the bond of a tax-collector should be a lien upon all his real estate situate within the county at the time of filing of the bond. But it was held that a judgment against a collector upon a bond which was thus a lien upon his realty, was not a lien upon his homestead. A judgment against a private person was not, in that State, a lien on the homestead of the judgment debtor, and the State was not in respect of its revenue in any better position than was the citizen in regard to the collection of his debt: Thomp. on Homestead, sec. 387; 45 Ill., 297. It .is proper here to observe that the two exceptions 'to the ruling, as above stated by the learned author, was the case of the Commonwealth v. Cook, 8 Bush, (Ky.) 220, which was subsequently virtually overruled by the same court' in the case of the Commonwealth v. Lay, 12 Bush., 283; and the case of Brooks v. The State, 54 Ga., 36, which was the other exception, and turned upon the point that the exemption claimed operated retrospectively, and was disallowed on the authority of the case of Gunn v. Barry, 15 Wall, 610. It is to be [647]*647further observed, that in the ease of Gladney v. Deavers, 11 Ga., 79, it was held by the Supreme Court of that State that the State was bound by acts of the Legislature exempting certain articles of personal property from levy and sale for debts for the benefit of the wife and children of the debtor, so that they could not be seized and sold under execution for the payment of taxes. Hence there would seem to be really no conflict in the decisions of aey of the States upon this question, when there has not been a positive statutory provision prescribing a different rule.

In the case of Gunn v. United States, 9 Wall., 659, Mr.

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79 Tenn. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ren-v-driskell-tenn-1883.