State Ex Rel. Scott & Burton v. Kenan

94 N.C. 296
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 94 N.C. 296 (State Ex Rel. Scott & Burton v. Kenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Scott & Burton v. Kenan, 94 N.C. 296 (N.C. 1886).

Opinion

SMITH, C. J.

(after stating the facts). I. The motion to dismiss for the alleged defects in the complaint, was properly overruled. It avers a distinct breach of official duty, in refusing to set apart the personal property exemptions to each, and upon his demand and consent that the other partner might have his also allotted out of the partnership property, when there was none other, exceeding one hundred dollars in value, out of which an allotment could have been made. Instead of recognizing and giving effect to this constitutional right of the judgment debtor, secured to him also by statutory regulation, the sheriff sold all the property levied on, and applied the proceeds to the execution in his hands. These allegations show a breach of official duty, followed by damage to the debtor, which admits of redress by action.

*300 II. The second exception, based upon the proposition that the exemption could not be taken out of partnership effects, while there were partnership liabilities outstanding and unprovided for, is equally untenable. The contrary has been expressly decided in Burns v. Harris, 67 N. C., 140, where a doubt entertained at the hearing of the appeal in the same cause at the preceding term, is resolved, and the law thus explicitly laid down by Reade, J.: “One of two partners cannot have a portion of the partnership effects set apart to him, as his personal property exemption, without the consent of the other partner or partners. But if the other partner or partners consent, this may be done. The creditors of the firm cannot object, because they no more have a lien upon the partnership effects, than creditors of an individual have upon his effects. In our case, the partners did assent.” We are asked, however,to reverse this ruling, as at variance with rulings in many other States, and as resting upon unsound reason. 'The cases referred to and discussed in a recent work, Thompson on Homesteads, §194, et seq., are Pond v. Kemball, 101 Mass., 105; Yuptel v. McFie, 9 Kans., 30; Gaylord v. Inhoff, 26 Ohio St., 317; Russell v. Lennon, 39 Wisc., 570; Bonsall v. Conely, 44 Penn. St., 447, and several cases arising under the bankrupt law, decided in the Federal Courts.

The author also,cites cases in harmony with ours, and prefaces the introduction of this branch of the general subject of his treatise, with these words:

“Do the same principles apply, when a single partner claims exemption out of partnership effects, or when a partnership firm claims out of such assets, the exemption allowed to a single debtor ? If the question were res integra we should feel no doubt it ought to be answered in the affirmative,” — assigning his reasons therefor.

The rule prevailing here, is fully vindicated, the author thinks, in the able opinion of Porter, J., delivered in the case of Stewart v. Brown, 37 N. Y., 350, largely quoted in the work. We should be reluctant to overrule a decision made nearly sixteen *301 years since, if the reasoning by which the result is reached was not entirely satisfactory to us; for considerations of the highest moment, demand that the Court adhere to its adjudications deliberately made, and to preserve confidence in the stability of the law, as declared, preserved, and to depart only when the decision is clearly wrong, and calculated to lead to mischievous consequences unless corrected. But the ruling now controverted, upon the basis of adverse adjudications elsewhere, commends itself to our approval, as both sound in principle, and in harmony with the law relating to partnerships, as declared in other cases. The general subject has been so recently considered, and the authorities examined in Allen v. Grissom, 90 N. C., 90, as to render further discussion needless. The separate partners have a right, in order to their own exoneration, to have the joint property applied to the joint debts, and in its exercise the joint creditors reap the benefits, but no such equity resides in the creditors, as such, to have their demands first satisfied. When the partner refuses to avail himself of this equitable right, and consents to an appropriation of the common property to the personal and separate use of one of them, the result is the same as if there were no joint liabilities, and each had a perfect right to his own share.

Putting the partnership creditors out of the way, there can be no legal obstacle to what is in effect an actual partition between them of so much as each receives as his exemption. Why should it not be so? The joint creditors have no more right to shift the burden from the joint, and put it upon the separate property, to the injury of the individual creditor, than he has to do the reverse and put the burden upon the joint property, to the injury of the former. Upon principle, then, we uphold and abide by the ruling heretofore made, as resting upon sound reason.

It is further maintained that the refusal to set apart the exempt articles, is an omission not embraced in the condition of the bonds in suit.

The laying off the demanded articles, is a positive act enjoined upon the appraisers, whom the Sheriff must summon in order *302 that this may be done, and this official duty is directly connected with his execution of the process. Moreover, the statute expressly declares, that “ any officer making a levy, who shall refuse or neglect to summon and qualify appraisers, as heretofore provided, or who shall fail to make due return of their proceedings, or who shall levy upon the homestead, set off by said appraisers or assessors, shall be liable to indictment for a misdemeanor, and he and his sureties shall be liable to the owner of said homestead for all costs and damages in a civil action.” The Code §516.

While the action is specifically given to the owner of the homestead by name, in the concluding clause, the preceding part of the section, extends it to all cases before provided for, and as well to the claimant of exempt personal, as the claimant of exempt real estate.

The condition of the bond is, that the officer “shall well and truly execute and due return make, of all process and precepts to him directed,” and the appointment of appraisers to set apart the exemption, is a duty connected with, and inseparable from, the execution of the process, and thus is embraced in the terms of the condition. If it were not specially mentioned, the present case might come within the general clause, that the officer will truly and faithfully execute the said office of Sheriff, during his continuance therein,” for the conduct complained of, is within the scope and purpose for which the bond is given, and properly finds its place among the specifications it contains.

The ruling in Crumpler v. The Governor, 1 Dev., 52, is not repugnant to a construction of the concluding words of the condition, which extends them so far as to embrace the present official misconduct, for it is in the range of the duties specified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.C. 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-scott-burton-v-kenan-nc-1886.