This action was brought by the respondent for the recovery of damages occasioned by the alleged conversion by the appellants of certain personal property, claimed to have been owned by respondent. The amended complaint alleges that the appellant Reiley at the time of the conversion was the sheriff of Minnehaha county, and that his co-appellant, H. Millerke, was the plaintiff in a certain action wherein respondent in this action was the defendant. It is also alleged that some time prior to the commencement of this action the appellant H. Millerke sued out a writ of attachment in the action .above mentioned against the defendant (who is- respondent in this action) under and- by virtue of which the appellant Reiley, as such sheriff, seized upon the personal property claimed to have been the subject of the conversion. That, within the time allowed by law, a “demand -to. sheriff to set *347off exempt property,” accompanied by a schedule of plaintiff’s property, was served on the appellant Reiley as such sheriff, claiming that all of said property was exempt from levy and sale on execution. This, demand contained the name of a qualified party to act as an appraiser of the said property, and demanded that said appellant, as such sheriff, cause an appraisement of said property to be made, as provided by law, and that the same be released and returned to -the plaintiff; then follows an allegation that: “The defendants did thereupon willfully, wantonly, and wrongfully, with intent to, and did thereby, annoy, worry, and oppress the plaintiff, and deprive him of the uses, rights, and benefits of 'his said exemptions, counsel and agree with each other to refuse, and the defendant sheriff, under the direction and procurement of the defendant Millerke, did thereupon refuse to make and cause an appraisement of the said property, and refuse to permit selection or taking thereof as exempt and refuse -to surrender -the said exempt property; but, under defendant Millerke’s direction and with his co-operation, the defendants persisted in retaining -said property for the benefit of said defendant Millerke; and so wrongfully kept plaintiff’s said exemptions from him and wrongfully converted same, to hi? damage,” etc. — and demanded judgment for exemplary as well as actual damages. Defendant demurred to this amended complaint upon the ground: “(i) That it appears upon the face of said amended complaint that the -same does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; (2) that it appears upon the face of the^said amended complaint that several causes of action have been improperly united.” A trial upon the demurrer was had which resulted in the same being overruled by the court, and this appeal is from the order averruling the demurrer.
Whether or not the amended complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action depends upon the interpretation to be given our exemption law.
[1] So far as material to this case, it will be found in sections 355 to 360, inclusive, Code Civ. Proc. If the judgment debtor wishes to avail himself of his rights under the law, he must make, or cause to be made, and delivered to the officer having the writ under which the levy was made, a verified schedule of all of his personal property, and may name -some disinterested person to act as one of the appraisers for the purpose of ascertaining the value of *348this property. The judgment creditor may then select one person to act as one of the appraisers. These two may select a third; and the three so selected, after they take and subscribe an oath, must then proceed to appraise the property at its actual value. The claiming of the exemptions by judgment debtor is a mere privilege accorded to him which he may exercise or not — .just as he sees fit — but when once the verified schedule, mentioned in section 355, accompanied by a demand for an appraisement, and that the debtor’s exempt property be set off to him hatve been delivered to the sheriff, it is his duty to cause the appraisement to< be made; and tnat,' too, before he takes any further steps under his writ. This is a matter in which he is vested with no discretion whatever. It i-s a purefy ministerial duty, the performance of which may be.compelled by mandamus. Bank of Neligh v. Lancaster et al., 54 .Neb. 467, 74 N. W. 858. The delivery to him. of the verified schedule suspends the further operation or authority of his writ until .the appraisement has Deen made. The judgment debtor or judgment creditor, or both, may fail to exercise their privilege of naming a person to act as one of the appraisers, 'but this would furnish no legal excuse for the officer not to proceed with the appraisement. If they, or either of them, fail to make a selection, then this duty also devolves upon the officer. He must select one, or if necessary two, appraisers; but it is his duty to see that the appraisement is made at all events, and, if he fails to 'have it made or disregards ■the claim-of exemptions and persists in proceeding under 'his writ, his acts are wholly unwarranted, and amount to a conversion of the property.
[2] With this view of the law in mind, let us take up appellants’ demurrer. They contend that, as by the provisions of section 362, Code Civ. Proc., no exemptions are to be allowed against an execution issued for the purchase money due' on the property claimed to be exempt; that the complaint is bad, because it does not allege that the debt sued upon in the attachment suit was not for the purchase money due on the property claimed to be exempt. In other words, that the law makes an exception in favor of purchase-money judgments, and that this exception ought to have been pleaded in the complaint. In this contention they are clearly wrong. Ifj without any reference to the purchase money, the complaint states a cause of action, it is sufficient. A prima facie *349case is made out, and, if there are' any facts that take the -case out of the general rule, they are matters of defense and must be taken advantage of by answer. In order to avail themselves of such matter, they must plead, by way of affirmative defense, facts sufficient to bring themselves within the exception, and the burden is upon them to- show what, if any, property is not exempt. Wagner v. Olson, 3 N. D. 69, 54 N. W. 286; citing Paddock v. Balgord, 2 S. D. 100, 48 N. W. 840 — a case, directly in point on this proposition.
[3] Appellants next contend that the schedule attached to respondent’s claim of exemptiohs, and also attached to the amended complaint herein, unjustly claimed some of the listed property to be absolutely exempt, and that it also showed the value of respondent’s property to exceed the statutory amount. This contention is wholly without force. It is immaterial whether the judgment debtor’s schedule shows his property to be worth more or less than the statutory amount or whether it shows it to be of any value whatever; and whether property is absolutely exempt or not ií to be determined in a disputed case -by the court, and not by either party to the controversy. All that the judgment debtor is required to do is to make out a schedule showing all of his personal property, including moneys and credits. A schedule is not an appraisement. It is a mere formal list or bill of quantities (Webster’s New International Dictionary), and need contain no values -whatever. The values aré to be ascertained by the appraisement. That is what i-t is for, and it is to this appraisement, and to it alone, that we are to look for the values of the judgment debtor’s property.
jj4-6] It is next contended on behalf of the appellant Miller - ke that t-he> complaint is not good as to him, for the reason that it does not allege that he ever had possession of any of the property, or that any demand was ever made upon him to release any of it, and that, never having had possession of the propery, actual or -constructive, he could not be guilty -o-f -conversion. We cannot agree with appellant in this contention. Whether or not a demand is necessary 'before an action in trover will lie depends wholly upon the circumstances of the case. Where a party is rightfully in the possession of personal property, a demand and refusal are necessary for the maintenance -of -trover. 38 Cyc. 2032, and cases cited. *350But, if the possession is wrongful, then the action will lie without having made a previous demand. 38 Cyc. 2033, and cases cited. In this case respondent’s demand upon the appellant Reiley to appraise and release the property in question was a sufficient demand as to him. By his refusal to make such appraisement he became a trespasser, and his possession, from that time on, was wrongful, and no further demand upon him was necessary. But the complaint alleges that the appellants co-operated and acted jointly in refusing to make the appraisement. Appellant Millerke knew all of the facts and circumstances relative to Reiley’s possession of the property. In fact, the complaint alleges that Reiley was following and acting upon the counsel and advice of Millerke when he refused to have respondent’s property appraised and his exemptions set off to him. It was then that the conversion took place. The possession then became wrongful as to Reiley; but, as they, were acting conjointly in the control and retention of the property, the conversion was as much by Millerke as by Reiley. Millerke was as much in possession as Reiley, and his (MiMerke’s) possession was wrongful in the first instance; therefore, no demand upon him was necessary. Furthermore, he having counseled and advised Reiley to disregard the demand that was made upon him, it is apparent that a demand upon Millerke would have been wholly unavailing. If the allegations of the complaint are true, and for the purposes of the demurrer they are admitted to be true, then the defendant Millerke was as much responsible for the failure to make the appraisement as the officer whose duty it was to cause the appraisement to be made. In other words, they became joint tort-feasors and became jointly liable for .the conversion of the property, and this action can be maintained without a demand upon either -of them: Mullaney v. Humes, 48 Kan. 368, 29 Pac. 691; Eisenhauer v. Dill et al., 6 Ind. App. 188, 33 N. E. 220; Murphy v. Sherman et al., 25 Minn. 196; Bonnel v. Dunn, 28 N. J. Law, 153; Elder v. Frevert et al., 18 Nev. 446, 5 Pac. 69; Castile v. Ford et al., 53 Neb. 507, 73 N. W. 945.
[7] But we might concede that it was necessary to make a specific demand on Millerke before this action could be maintained, and that no demand was ever made; and still this demurrer would avail him nothing. File united with Reiley in a joint demurrer to the complaint, and, the complaint being good as to Reiley, the de*351murrer was properly overruled as to them both. Rochford v. School District, 17 S. D. 542, 97 N. W. 747.
There being but one cause of action stated in the complaint, the second ground of demurrer needs no further consideration.
The order appealed from is affirmed.