Block v. George

CLOPTON, J.

— There are three classes of debts against which homestead exemption is allowed, the character and extent of the exemption being dependent on the time when the debt against which it is claimed was contracted — whether prior to the constitution of 1868; or after it became operative, and before the act of April 23, 1873; or after the passage of the act. There are, also, two modes in which the exemption maybe claimed; and a defendant in execution will be held to have waived his right, if he knowingly permits his property to be levied on and sold, without making a claim of exemption in one of the modes provided. — Martin v. Lile, 63 Ala. 406.

As one mode, the statute provides, that “ any resident of this State, entitled to, and claiming such exemption, may at any time make a declaration in writing, stating the property so selected and claimed as being exempted, and describing each piece or item of such property, with the value thereof, in such manner that the same may be known and indentified with reasonable certainty, and verified by the oath of such party; such declaration and claim must be filed for record in the office of the Probate Court of the county in which the property is situated.” — Code, 1876, § 2828. After the filing of such declaration and claim for record, no execution, attachment, or other process for debt, shall be levied on such property, unless the plaintiff contest the validity of such claim, in whole or in part, by making affidavit, and, if it be proposed to levy on personal property, by giving bond, as required by section 3830. The appellee .insists, that he made and filed for record a declaration and claim of exemp*182tion in compliance with the, statute, and that the sale of the lands should be set aside, inasmuch as the plaintiff in execution procured them to be levied on and sold without contesting the claim.

In Clark v. Spencer, 75 Ala. 49, it was held, that when a valid declaration and claim have been made and filed for record, the preliminary step of contestation should be taken, and that a levy and sale without inaugurating a contest are irregular, and the sale will be set aside on timely application by a proper party; and that a valid declaration and record of claim, though only applicable to debts contracted after April 28, 1873, is sufficient to require the preliminary step to contest, before the land can be levied on by execution for a debt contracted prior to the time the constitution of 1868 went into effect. There must, however, be a declaration and record of claim of exemption prima facie sufficient as against one of the classes of debts; for the making and filing for record of the declaration and claim is, as to the creditors of the claimant, prima facie evidence of the correctness of such claim, and casts on the creditor the onus to show that it is incorrect. — Code of 1876, § 2831; Abbott v. Gillespy, 75 Ala. 180. The lands, the sale of which appellee moved to set aside, were sold under a pluries execution issued on a judg-

ment rendered in April, 1869, for a debt contracted in 1866. On February 27, 1877, the defendant, who is appellee, made and filed for record in the office of the judge of probate a declaration in writing, claiming the lands as being exempted as against debts contracted before, the constitution of 1868 became operative. The claim of exemption having been made against a specific class of debts, distinguishes it from the claims heretofore considered by this court. By the statutes in force at the time the debt was created, “such real property as may be selected by the head of the family, to include the homestead, not to exceed three hundred and twenty acres, and in value not to exceed five hundred dollars,” was exempt from levy and sale by any legal process. — Rev. Code, § 2880. The mode, method and remedy for asserting, ascertaining, and determining exemptions, when claimed in relation to debts contracted since April 23, 1873, are made applicable ' in cases of debts contracted before the constitution of 1868 became operative. — Code of 1876, § 2844. A claim of exemption, professedly and eo nomine against only one of the classes of debts, should be prima facie a valid claim against debts of such class. When a claimant of exemptions, as *183against debts contracted prior to the latter date, attempts to conform to section 2828, he should set forth with reasonable certainty hi his declaration and claim the lands selected, being governed in quantity and quality by the law in force at the time of the creation of the debt. — Clark v. Spencer, supra. In the declaration and claim filed for record by appellee, he claims as exempt an undivided fifth interest in designated lands, and also the lands sold, of which he is the sole owner; and states that his interest in all the lands described does , not exceed two thousand dollars in value, being four-fold the statutory value. Section 2828 requires the valuation to be stated in the declaration, in order that it may appear that the land selected does not exceed the legal limitation. Unless' the declaration and claim describe the selected land “in such manner that the same may be known and identified with reasonable certainty,” coming within the requirements both as to quantity and value, there is . no prima facie correct and valid claim of exemption — no such declaration and claim as call on the creditor to take the preliminary step to contest before-he can procure a levy to be made. It states no facts which it is necessary he should deny, and shows on its face that the entire land selected and claimed is not exempt. The claim of exemption as made and recorded, even if no particular class of debts had been specified therein, is not prima facie valid against any one of the classes of debts. As to debts contracted before the constitution of 1868 became operative, it exceeds the limited value; and as to debts contracted thereafter, it exceeds the limited quantity.

The other mode of asserting the exemption applies in cases where levy of execution or other process has been made, and no declaration and claim of exemption has been filed for record under section 2828. In such case, the claimant may assert his claim in writing, under oath, as provided in said section, which shall be lodged with the officer making • the levy, and which the plaintiff must successfully contest before the property can be sold. — Code, §§ 2834, 2835. An execution was issued on the judgment December 14, 1876, and levied on all the lands described in the declaration filed for record. After the levy, and on the same day the declaration was filed, February 27th, 1877, the appellee lodged with the sheriff a verified claim of exemption in writing. Notice of the claim having been given to the plaintiff, he filed, in May, 1877, an affidavit contesting it, after the expiration of the time allowed by law, and a second affidavit in June, *1841881, without a new claim of exemption having been made. No issue was ever made up, and no further proceedings were had in the matter of the contest until November, 1881, when the Circuit Court, on motion of defendant, dismissed the contest for want of prosecution. Appellee further insists, that these proceedings preclude the plaintiff to procure a levy and sale of the lands under the execution issued in September, 1884. This raises for the first time the question, whether, where land has been levied on under execution, and a claim of exemption lodged with the sheriff, none being re-, corded in the Probate Court, the judgment creditor can have a subsequent execution levied on the land without first contesting the previous claim lodged with the sheriff.

The contestation of a claim of exemption, it has been said, is essentially a suit, in which the plaintiff in the process is the actor, and of which the levy is the institution. The right of exemption being determinable on the state of facts existing when the lien attaches, the contest must be determined on the grounds as they existed at that time. Events subsequently occurring will not operate either to support or defeat the right of exemption. — McCrary v. Chase, 71 Ala. 540; Hines v. Duncan, 79 Ala. 112. It follows, that had an issue been made up and judgment thereon, it only would have been conclusive of the right to the exemption at the time the levy was made under the execution and the claim interposed. Certainly a dismissal of the contest, without issue and trial on the merits, can not have any greater effect. After judgment on the contest in favor of the claimant, he may abandon his homestead by leasing it beyond the term permitted by the statute, or losing it otherwise, whereby it becomes subject to the payment of his debts; and in the absence of express declaration in the statute, or clear implication, it will not be intended that in such case the execution creditor is precluded to have the property levied on and sold. It may be said, that under this construction a heartless judgment creditor can annoy an unfortunate debtor by the issue and levy of successive executions, imposing the burden to interpose as many successive claims. But the debtor is not necessarily subject to such annoyance and hardship. He may protect himself by making and filing for record a declaration and claim as provided in section 2828, after the making and filing of which the statute intervenes, and prohibits the levy of any execution, attachment, or other process, without the preliminary institution of a contest. No su.ch effect is given to *185lodging a claim of exemptions with the officer after a levy has been made. The only effects are, to suspend the sale under the execution levied, if there be a contest, until it is decided, and on a successful assertion of the right, or if the plaintiff declines to contest, a discharge of the levy. The claimant may elect in which mode to assert his right and claim to exemptions, receiving the benefits, and incurring the consequential burdens of the mode elected.

The claim of exemption, which appellee lodged with the sheriff, though defective in material respects, was held sufficient, being amendable in the court from which the process issued, to put upon the plaintiff the duty of contestation. Block v. Bragg, 68 Ala. 291. And the judgment dismissing the contest was affirmed by this court. — Block v. George, 70 Ala. 409. Such proceedings and the judgment of dismissal, because of the failure of the plaintiff to prosecute, after having instituted the contest, may be regarded a quasi judicial admission of the right to the exemption at the time the claim was made.

An insufficient claim of exemption filed in the office of the Probate Court furnishes, by itself, no ground for vacating the sale. — Sheffey v. Davis, 60 Ala. 548. The sale should not have been set aside on the ground, merely, that defendant, in February, 1877, filed for record the declaration and claim shown by the record, in the absence of other evidence of irregularities, or of facts affecting the fairness and equity of the sale. A different result may follow, if it should appear, as to which the record is silent, that personal notice of the levy was not given as required by the statute, so as to afford defendant an opportunity to make a new or amended and sufficient claim of exemption.

Beversed and remanded.