This is a rehearing of Johnson v. Bartek, 54 Neb. 787. Johnson sued Scott before-a justice of the peace and caused a writ of attachment to be issued and Scott’s property seized thereon. The ground of the attachment was that Scott was a. non-resident of the state. Scott subsequently appeared before the justice and moved to discharge the attachment. His motion was overruled, the attachment sustained, judgment rendered against him, and the justice issued an order for the sale of the attached ' property. Scott then filed with the sheriff an inventory, under oath, of all the property which he owned, accompanied by an affidavit alleging that he was a resident of the state, the head of a family, and that he had neither houses, lands, nor town lots exempt as a homestead; and thereupon the sheriff attempted to have the property appraised in accordance with section 522 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The appraisers fixed the value of all S'eott’s property at less than $100, and thereupon the sheriff turned over the property he had attached to Scott. This suit- was brought by Johnson against the sheriff to hold him liable for the amount of the judgment against Scott, because of his release of the *424property attached. The court below directed a verdict for the sheriff, and Johnson brought the case here on error. On the former hearing we reversed the judgment of the district court, solely upon the ground that the appraisement which the sheriff attempted to harm made of the attached property was void, as it was made by. only two appraisers and the statute required three.
1. The argument of the plaintiff in error is that the order or judgment of the justice of the peace overruling the motion to discharge the attachment fixed the status of the attached property—that is-, adjudicated that it was not exempt and was liable to be sold for the satisfaction of the judgment rendered in the case in which the property was seized; and, since this judgment stands unreversed and unappealed from, both the debtor and the sheriff are now estopped from asserting that the property was exempt and was not liable to be sold to satisfy that judgment. To support this contention counsel cite us to State v. Sanford, 12 Neb. 425, and State v. Krumpus, 13 Neb. 321. Those cases sustain the contention of counsel, and the decisions were based upon the doctrine that attached property is in the custody of the law, and the judgment of the court sustaining the attachment includes a judgment that the property is not exempt. But these cases were expressly overruled by this court in Hamilton v. Fleming, 26 Neb. 240, and State v. Carson, 27 Neb. 501; and the doctrine of the court now is that the judgment of a court sustaining an attachment does not settle the status of the attached property,—that is, does not determine whether or not it was exempt from seizure on attachment. (State v. Wilson, 31 Neb. 462; Smith v. Johnson, 43 Neb. 755.) The reason for the rule was stated by Harrison, J., in Quigley v. McEvony, 41 Neb. 73, to be that the question as to whether attached property is or is not exempt is not an issue involved in an attachment proceeding; that the issue involved in that proceeding is whether or not the grounds stated in the affidavit for attachment are true. It therefore follows *425ftkat an officer sued a debtor for selling exempt property could not successfully defend solely by showing ■ that he .seized the property on attacQiment, and that the attachment, on motion of the debtor to dissolve, was sustained. He would have to go further and show either that the property was not exempt from seizure or that the debtor had waived his exemption.
2. As already stated, we held on the former hearing that the attempted appraisement made of the property in question by the sheriff was void. We adhere to that conclusion. But the undisputed evidence in the case shows that the property which the sheriff released Avas property specifically exempt- from sale on judicial process by .section 530 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and the contention of the defendant in error is that, notwithstanding the attempted appraisement was void, the judgment of the district court was right, since no statute exists authorizing or requiring the sheriff bo have specifically exempt property appraised. The territorial legislature of Nebraska in 1859 exempted from sale on judicial process a homestead not exceeding 160 acres of land outside of a municipal corporation, or land consisting of not more tlian two contiguous lots within an incorporation, and at the same.time provided how lands levied upon and claimed as a homestead might be selected and set apart; and in the same year it enacted Avhat is uoav section 530 of our Code of Civil Procedure, specifically exempting from sale on judicial process certain specifically named property of the debtor. Neither at that time, nor at any time subsequent thereto, has the legislature provided in Avhat manner specifically exempt property seized on execution or attachment should be determined. It enumerated the articles of property which the debtor might hold as exempt, and specifically forbade the seizure of those articles by sheriffs or constables. The Iuav of 1859 in that-respect remains unchanged. An officer seizes property which is specifically exempt at his peril, and Avhen sued for refusing to seize *426such property on process, it would seem that he might successfully defend himself by showing that it was spe-) cifically exempt. In 1860 the territorial legislature, per-,' haps for the purpose of equalizing somewhat the exempt tion between those who owned lands and those who did not, enacted what is now section 521 of our Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that “All heads of families! who have neither lands, town lots, nór houses subject to exemption as a homestead, under the laws of this state, shall have exempt from forced sale on execution the sum of five hundred dollars in personal property;” and the same legislature enacted what are now sections 522 and '523 of our Code of Civil .Procedure, which provide, in substance, that any person desiring to avail himself of the $500 of exemption allowed him in lieu of a homestead might filé an inventory under oath in the court where the judgment was obtained against him, or with the officer holding the execution, of all the personal property owned by him, at any time before the property seized on execution had been sold, and the officer thereupon should cause the property to be appraised; and the debtor might select, at the appraisement made thereof, $500 worth of his property and hold it exempt. The exemption provided for by this section 521 Avas intended by the legislature to be an exemption in addition to the property specifically exempted by section 530 of the Code. (Williams v. Golden, 10 Neb. 432.)
We thus see that the legislature has divided property which is exempt from seizure by judicial process into two classes. The property of the first class is enumerated in section 530 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That property is specifically exempted, not only to the resident and citizen Avho owns a homestead, but to the one who does not. The other exemption is a general one awarded to heads of families in the state who have neither lands, town lots, nor houses subject to exemption as a homestead; and he who claims that exemption is required to file an inventory and have the property appraised as re*427quired by section 522 of the Code. In such an inventory the property specifically exempted from sale on judicial process by section 530 of the Code should not be included,' or if included and appraised, the debtor, in making his selection, may first take out that specifically exempt property and then take $500 worth of the other property. It follows, therefore, we think, that when an officer is sued by a creditor for releasing, the property of his debtor which had been seized on attachment or execution, he may successfully defend himself if lie shows (1) that the property was, as a matter of law, specifically exempt from seizure, or (2) that it was exempt under section 521 at the election of the debtor, and that he had exercised his right to have it declared exempt by complying with the statute in that respect. In the case at bar the property in controversy was specifically exempt under section 530 of the Code, and it was not necessary for the officer to cause it to be. appraised in order to shield himself from liability for returning it to the debtor. No statute exists authorizing him to have such properly appraised. lie, like every one else, must know the law. lie must determine for himself, at his peril, whether or not property is specifically exempt. If he makes a mistake and sells specifically exempt property, he cannot escape liability therefor by showing that he had the property appraised in accordance with section 521 of the Code. On the other hand, if the property is specifically exempt and he releases it, he is not liable to the creditor, because he did not have it appraised in accordance with said section. The judgment of the district court is.
Affirmed.