Schuler v. Wallace

607 P.2d 411, 61 Haw. 590, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 137
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1980
DocketNO. 5960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 607 P.2d 411 (Schuler v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schuler v. Wallace, 607 P.2d 411, 61 Haw. 590, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 137 (haw 1980).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This is an appeal from an order denying a motion to compel payment of the execution sale proceeds to *591 Appellants who prior to such sale were the owners. It seeks our interpretation of the language of the former HRS § 651-65, as it read before its repeal and the substitution of a new Chapter 651, part III, by Act 136, Sess. L. 1976. 1 Former § 651-65, in relevant part, read as follows: (

§ 651-65 Certain Real Property. Real Property consisting of one piece of land not to exceed one acre, and the dwelling house and other buildings thereon situated, where the owner resides, shall be exempt from levy and sale on execution as follows:
(1) Such property of a value not exceeding $20,000 owned by any head of a family or any person sixty-five years of age or older;
(2) Such property of a value not exceeding $10,000 owned by any other person.
The values specified in this section shall be determined solely by the assessed value for taxation purposes. . . . We reverse.

For the purposes of this appeal, we assume that the following facts, set forth in affidavits filed by Appellants, were before the court: Appellants, husband and wife, were joint owners in fee simple of a residence property comprising less than one acre, which they occupied. At all relevant times, Appellant Howard O. Wallace was over the age of 65 years. Appellee obtained, in this action on a promissory note, a summary judgment against Appellants for the sum of $25,755.35. An execution was issued commanding the sheriff to levy upon the property of Appellants and to sell the same to satisfy the amount of the judgment and interest thereon, and thereupon to make return of the writ “with the proceeds by you collected.” The sheriff’s return of execution sets forth that the writ was executed on the residence property of Appellants by sale thereof at auction for $27,000, subject to liens and encumbrances and unpaid taxes, with expenses totalling $857.83, resulting in a deficiency of $255.36 in net amount *592 compared with the judgment and interest to date of the sale. Appellee acknowledges that he was the execution sale purchaser and contends that the sale was a “wash transaction” which resulted in no receipt of funds by the sheriff.

Appellants moved for a stay of the execution sale, “for equitable reasons to be shown at the hearing.” The record does not disclose what reasons were advanced at the hearing of the motion, which apparently was granted orally, subject to a bond in the amount of $25,000 which Appellants did not provide, so that no stay was ordered. Although there is no transcript of the hearing on this motion, Appellee by memoranda filed in the circuit court acknowledged that Appellants’ counsel asserted a right to claim an exemption. Appellants’ counsel also called the sheriffs attention to the exemption claim of $20,000 at the time of the execution sale. No document asserting this claim to the exemption appears in the record prior to the motion to compel payment of the execution sale proceeds, filed subsequent to the sale.

The assessed value of the property for taxation purposes is not disclosed by the record. In Appellee’s affidavit filed in the circuit court, it is averred that the maximum price at which the property could be sold in March, 1975, was $165,000, which after deduction of amounts due on prior encumbrances and expenses of sale would net Appellee only $15,000.

A preliminary question is whether there were execution sale proceeds for disposition by the circuit court. Appellee contends that there were no proceeds because of the offset of the bid against the judgment. This argument necessarily assumes that the proceeds of the sale have been applied against the judgment, a result which cannot occur until after the proceeds have been turned over to the court by the sheriff pursuant to the writ’s command. If the property was conveyed by the sheriff to Appellee in return for a credit against the judgment, as the record implies, the sheriff remained accountable pursuant to his return and the proceeds were constructively in the hands of the court when it denied Appellants’ motion. Appellee’s right to accomplish payment of the execution sale price, pursuant to his successful bid, by offset *593 against the judgment was placed in issue by that motion. By its denial of the motion, the circuit court impliedly confirmed Appellee’s right of offset.

Appellee contends that Appellants’ exemption claim was not entitled to recognition because of lack of notice. We do not have before us a case of sale of exempt property in total ignorance of its character. Both Appellee and the sheriff were apprised of the possibility that Appellants might be entitled to claim an exemption, prior to the consummation of the execution sale. § 651-65 contained no provisions for notice or establishment of the exemption in order to preserve the rights of Appellants. The record, however, reveals that Appellee did receive actual notice of Appellants’ claim of exemption under the statute in the sum of $20,000.00, prior to the execution sale. Whether the sale was effective to deprive Appellants of their ownership of exempt property is not before us, since Appellants claim only against the sale proceeds. We conclude that, even if notice of the exemption was required, enough was done to place Appellee and the sheriff upon inquiry and to preserve Appellants’ claim to the sale proceeds. Scofield v. Hopkins and Others, 61 Wis. 370, 21 N. W. 259 (1884); Paulson v. Hurlburt, 93 Ore. 419, 183, P.937 (1919); cf. Kaiser v. Pua, 23 Haw. 584 (1917).

While the Appellants may have claimed, in the court below, an exemption of $20,000.00 for the husband and also a separate exemption of $10,000.00 for the wife, upon the contention that the execution was levied upon sepárate property interests in the joint property, the briefs filed in this Court by Appellants show clearly that they claimed just a single exemption of $20,000.00 for the husband ortly. Under such circumstances, we must construe that Appellants’ claim of exemption must be limited to the single exemption and that they waived the $10,000.00 exemption that could have been claimed by the wife. 2 If Appellants recognized and were fully *594 aware of their exemption rights in the circuit court, and apparently they were, then their subsequent failure to mention and assert the wife’s right to her claim of exemption in this Court would amount to a clear waiver. Pence v. Price, 211 N.C. 707, 192 S.E. 99 (1937); cf. Kaiser v. Pua, supra. In any event, nothing is presented to us which would suggest that Appellants’ claim is for $30,000.00 exemptions. We thus proceed with the consideration of the contentions submitted to us by Appellants in their briefs and arguments.

Section 651-65 exempts “property of a value not exceeding” the amount of the applicable exemption.

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Bluebook (online)
607 P.2d 411, 61 Haw. 590, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuler-v-wallace-haw-1980.