State ex rel. Glendon v. Harrington

33 Mo. App. 476, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 16
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 Mo. App. 476 (State ex rel. Glendon v. Harrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Glendon v. Harrington, 33 Mo. App. 476, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 16 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Thompson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is brought against the sheriff of the city of St. Louis, and the sureties on his official bond, to recover damages for the conversion of the plaintiff’s interest in certain real estate exempt under the provisions of section 2346, Revised Statutes. This statute is as follows: “Each head of a family, at his election, in lieu of the property mentioned in the first and second subdivisions of section two thousand three hundred and forty-three may select and hold, exempt from execution, any other property, real, personal or mixed, or debts and wages, not exceeding in value the amount of three hundred dollars.” The next section contains the following provisions: “It shall be the duty of the officer in whose hands any execution may come, before he shall levy the same, to apprise the person against whom such execution has issued of the property exempt under sections two thousand three hundred and forty-two, two thousand three hundred and forty-three and two thousand three hundred and forty-six, and his right to hold the same as exempt from attachment and execution ; and such officer shall summon from the neighborhood three disinterested householders, who, after being sworn honestly and impartially to appraise the property exhibited to them, shall proceed- to appraise and set apart to said defendant the property exempt to him under this chapter.” The property on which the sheriff levied the execution consisted of a life estate, as tenant by the curtesy, in a lot in the city of St. Louis, on which there was a two-story building and shed, and which was, at the time of the levy, rented to a coal dealer at the rate of twenty dollars a month. The plaintiff was, at the time of the levy, about sixty-eight years of age, and his expectation of life, according to the Northampton life-tables, put in' evidence without objecti on, between seven and eight years, which would make the value [481]*481of his interest in the land near twelve hundred dollars, with the taxes and expenses deducted in making the estimate. He was, at the time of the levy, remarried, and was living with his family on other premises. The sheriff did not notify the plaintiff of his right of exemption, as required by section 2347, Revised Statutes, but, after the levy and some twenty days before the sale, the plaintiff filed with the sheriff a notice in writing, claiming all his right, title and interest in the property levied upon, as exempt from execution under the provisions of section 2346, Revised Statutes, and also claiming the said property, and all rents, profits and issues thereof, as a housekeeper and head of a family under the statute of this state relating to homesteads. The claim of homestead may be laid out of view; because it is admitted that the plaintiff was not occupying the property as his . homestead, and there was no question of homestead in the case in the trial court. The sheriff did not appoint appraisers, as required by the statute, nor did he take any measures to set apart the plaintiff’s exemption, but proceeded to sell the property in disregard thereof. The plaintiff, by his attorney, appeared at the sale, and notified the bidders that, by reason of the fact that the sheriff had not notified the plaintiff (execution defendant) of his right of exemption, as required by the statute, the sale would be void. This seems to have deterred the bystanders (of whom there were several) from bidding, so that there was but one bid, and that was made by the plaintiff’s attorneys at forty dollars, which was about enough to cover the costs. On this bid the property was struck off to them. Subsequently, the sheriff made a deed to them, and thereafter under this deed, they ousted the plaintiff’s tenant in a proceeding of unlawful detainer. As an excuse for failing to appoint appraisers, as required by the statute, the defendants gave evidence tending to show that the [482]*482property from its nature was not susceptible of being divided so as to set apart the plaintiff’s exemption in kind. But the court instructed the jury that the fact that the property would not be susceptible of division constituted no defense to the sheriff in making the sale as shown by the evidence. This instruction was right. The question is governed, we think, by the case of State to use v. Kurtzeborn, 2 Mo. App. 335, which goes to show that the statute is to be strictly followed, that the debtor is entitled to an appraisement, and that the officer has no discretion to refuse it. If the appraisers had reported that the property was not susceptible of division so as to set apart the debtor’s exemption, then the sheriff might have proceeded to sell the property for the purpose of satisfying the execution after first raising money enough to satisfy the debtor’s exemption, and if the bidding had not reached more than the sum of three hundred dollars there would have been no sale. It may equally be said that the fact that he proceeded wrongfully, without an appraisement, gave him no better right to strike off the property for less than three hundred dollars, and then to apply the money, not to the payment of the debtor’s exemption, but to the payment of the costs of the suit and execution. The facts fully warrant us in applying the language which was applied by Judge Bakewell to the conduct of the levying officer in the case of State to use v. Kurtzeborn, supra : “He is constituted, by the law, the guardian of the rights of the execution debtor in this matter; and he seems^to have utterly disregarded his duties and committed a flagrant violation of the plain rights of the debtor and his family. Such conduct cannot be too severely reprobated.” Under the principles of that and subsequent cases (State to use v. Finn, 8 Mo. App. 261; State to use v. Oarroll, 9 Mo. App. 275), the sheriff is clearly liable on his bond for the damage which the plaintiff has actually sustained, unless other principles [483]*483applicable to the peculiar facts- of- this case discharge him from liability.

The peculiarity of this case is that the debtor did not select his three hundred dollars exemption, given by section 2346, Revised S fcatutes, out of any specific personal property, but out of his interest in the real property which had been the subject of the levy. This he might properly do ; for the statute allowed him to make his selection out of “any other property, real, personal or mixed.” But it is argued that, as the subject of the levy and claim of exemption was real property, the rights of the debtor were assimilated to those of the proprietor of an estate of homestead, which has been sold on execution, in which case the purchaser gets no title. On this question the analogy between the debtor’s chattel exemption and the estate of homestead entirely fails. “The fight of exemption under sections 2343 and 2346 is a different thing from the homestead exemption,” as was well said by Black, J;, in a recent case. Paddock v. Lance, 94 Mo. 285. The statute relating to homesteads created a species of estate in the land,' subsisting in the debtor under certain conditions during his life and surviving to his wife and children so long as they hold together as a family. But in this chattel exemption there is nothing in the nature of an estate either in real or personal property. It depends entirely on the act of the debtor in selecting it as exempt from sale under the particular writ. His selection once made does not even characterize it as exempt, except in respect of successive levies under the same judgment. State to use v. Carroll, 24 Mo. App. 360.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Mo. App. 476, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-glendon-v-harrington-moctapp-1889.