The circuit court found that the plaintiff sold the notes mentioned in the findings of facts with the intention of preventing a seizure thereof by his creditors; and that, with the proceeds of the notes, he purchased the property in controversy, intending thereby to acquire exempt personal property which would be beyond the reach of his creditors. That such were the intentions of the plaintiff is the inevitable conclusion from the facts of the sale of the notes and the purchase of the property, because it must be presumed that the plaintiff intended the necessary results of his acts, and it was the necessary and inevitable result of *660such, sale and purchase (if valid) that tbe notes, and the property purchased with the proceeds thereof, were thereby placed beyond the reach of creditors of the plaintiff. The intention of the plaintiff is, therefore, rather the subject of a conclusion of law to be deduced from the facts, than an independent fact in the case. The findings would not have been any more favorable to the plaintiff had nothing been said therein concerning his intentions; and for like reasons they would not be any less favorable to him had the court found expressly that such sale and purchase were made by the plaintiff with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud his creditors. That also is the subject matter of a deduction from the- facts.
The material facts are, therefore, that the plaintiff was wholly insolvent; that he owned two notes which were liable to be reached by his creditors; and that he sold such notes, and, with the proceeds, immediately purchased the property in controversy. From these facts the intention of the plaintiff to place his property beyond the reach of legal process must be presumed.
The precise question to be determined is, therefore, Is property which under the statute (subd. 6, sec. 2982, R. S.) is ordinarily exempt from seizure on attachment or execution, liable to such seizure if the debtor is insolvent and has purchased the property with the proceeds of other property, not exempt, with the intention of holding the property so purchased as exempt, and thus preventing his creditors from collecting their debts out of his property? The question now arises for the first time in this court.
The creditors whom the defendant (the sheriff) represents do not attack the validity of the sale of the notes by the plaintiff, or the purchase by him of the property in controversy. On the contrary, their theory necessarily is that both the sale and purchase are legal transactions, — the sale divesting the plaintiff of all title to the notes, and the pur-*661cbase vesting in him a good title to the property thus acquired. But they maintain that because the notes might have been reached by legal process while the insolvent debtor owned them, it ought to be held that no right of exemption to the property purchased with the proceeds of the notes ought to be upheld. Several cases are cited by counsel for defendant to this proposition, and it is doubtless sustained by some of them, particularly by Riddell v. Shirley, 5 Cal. 488; Emerson v. Smith, 51 Pa. St. 90; Brackett v. Watkins, 21 Wend. 68; Grimes v. Byrne, 2 Minn. 104; In re Wright, 3 Biss. 359; Pratt v. Burr, 5 Biss. 36. It is understood, however, that the opposite doctrine now prevails in California and New York. See Randall v. Buffington, 10 Cal. 491; Wilcox v. Hawley, 31 N. Y. 648.
"We think it must be conceded that there are very serious objections to the doctrine which the cases first above cited (and perhaps others) seem to assert. In the first place, it interpolates a qualification or limitation in the statute of ■ exemptions not written therein by the legislature. The statute exempts the specific property therein mentioned absolutely and unconditionally. The rule of these cases is that it shall not be exempt at all if purchased by an insolvent debtor with the proceeds of non-exempt property. This court has steadily held that it has no authority to make such interpolations. Harrington v. Smith, 28 Wis. 43; Chase v. Whiting, 30 Wis. 544.
Counsel for the defendant seeks to avoid the force of this principle by saying that courts do, by construction, sometimes ingraft exceptions upon statutes, and he refers, as' an illustration, to the line of cases which hold that the contributory negligence of the injured party will defeat a recovery in an action against a town to recover damages for an injury alleged to have been caused by a defective highway, whereas the statute giving the right of action contains no such qualification of the right. The cases are not parallel. *662The statute gives a right of action only -when the injury is caused by the insufficiency of the highway. The courts merely hold that the injury is not so caused if the negligence of the injured party contributes proximately to it. Those are cases of authorized construction of the words of a statute. In this case we are asked to engraft a limitation upon a statute when there is not a line or a word therein which will justify it.
Again, the doctrine under consideration rests upon the ground that exemption is merely a personal privilege of the debtor which the courts may lawfully adjudge forfeited for his fraud and dishonesty. This is too narrow a view. Our exemption laws were enacted in obedience to the mandate of the constitution: “ The privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary comforts of life shall be recognized by wholesome laws, exempting a reasonable amount of property from seizure or sale for the payment of any debt or liability hereafter contracted.” Art. I, .sec. 17.
This mandate and these laws are grounded in the soundest considerations of public policy, in that they are designed to secure not only to the debtor, but to his family, the necessary comforts of life, as against his creditors; thus protecting and guarding the highest interests both of the individual citizen and the family, the benefits of which to the state can scarcely be overrated. In Maxwell v. Reed, 7 Wis. 582, Mr. Justice Smith spoke of the exemption laws as “ one of the great bulwarks of individual freedom and manly citizenship, so carefully guarded by the fundamental law.” In dealing with the exemption laws this court has steadily kept these considerations in view, and has rejected every construction of them which would tend to defeat the beneficent purposes for which they were enacted. It has always given them a liberal construction in favor of the exemption, and in the case last cited, it held that a stipulation in a note, waiving the benefit of such laws in respect to the indebtedness *663thereby created, was inoperative and void, because opposed to a sound public policy. The principles upon which this court has uniformly thus acted seem to be disregarded in the cases which hold that in a case like this the right of exemption is forfeited. _
Moreover, the rule of these cases would deprive insolvent debtors of the right to acquire any exempt property with the proceeds of property not exempt. An insolvent debtor may have $50 in his pocket. "While he retains the money his creditors may reach it by legal process. Under the rule above mentioned, if he should purchase a cow with the money, no matter how sorely he and his family may need the cow, the creditor may seize and sell her upon execution. And this, not because it was a fraud on the creditor for the debtor to purchase the cow with his own money, but because such a use of the money operated in some mysterious way to repeal the exemption laws in respect to that particular cow.
Eor the reason above suggested we cannot approve the doctrine of the cases relied upon by the defendant to defeat the plaintiff’s right of exemption in the property in controversy. The true rule is, if the plaintiff made a fraudulent sale of the notes his creditors may reach them in the hands of the fraudulent purchaser, collect or sell them, and apply the proceeds on their demands. That is their only remedy against the fraud, and the sale of the notes is the only fraud in the transaction. The purchase by the plaintiff of exempt property with the proceeds of the notes' was a legal transaction, containing no element of fraud. The absolute title to the property so purchased vested in the plaintiff, one of the incidents of which was the right under the exemption laws to hold it against his.creditors.
The foregoing views are sustained by a large number of cases cited by counsel for plaintiff, references to which will he found in the report. We are satisfied that these cases *664lay down the correct rules of law applicable to this case. It follows that the plaintiff is entitled to hold the property claimed exempt from seizure, and hence that the case was correctly decided by the circuit court.
By the Oourt.— Judgment affirmed.