As sheriff of Bay county, defendant levied upon a stock of goods belonging to the firm of E. McCoy & Co., composed of the plaintiff, Elizabeth McCoy, and her two sons, William and Robert McCoy.
Elizabeth was a married woman, and resided with her husband in West Bay City.
The business of the firm was carried on at Pinconning, about twenty miles from the place where plaintiff resided, by the other two members of the firm. The partnership was formed in February, 1884. The plaintiff was a general partner, and prior to the levy she had drawn from the assets of the firm, from time to time, in money, $1,000, to pay upon a mortgage upon the homestead where she resided. This sum was more than she had ever invested in the business.
She visited Pinconning for the purpose of looking after the business about once in two weeks, or oftener, and when William and Robert McCoy, who were in the active management of the business, came down to Bay City to buy goods they would report to her the condition of the business, and advise with her as to its management. She was engaged in no other business, and had no interest in any other business, than this grocery firm at Pinconning. While the firm was doing business she was at home engaged in the ordinary business of housekeeping, occupying a house with her husband, attending and having charge of the details of her housekeeping as her principal occupation. She never took an active part, or any part whatever, in the management of the business at Pinconning.
At the time the levy was made the partners William and Robert McCoy claimed their exemption of $250 worth each of the goods, which exemption was set apart and delivered to them. .¡.The plaintiff also claimed $250 worth of the stock in trade as exempt, and demanded that the same be set aside to her, which demand was refused by the sheriff, who after-*366wards sold and disposed of the property; whereupon she brought this action of trover against the sheriff,’ and in her declaration counted for a conversion in the common-law form of that action, and made no reference to the statute providing for exemptions. ,
The defendant pleaded the general issue, and attached thereto a justification under the writ of attachment under which he levied. The court charged the jury that, upon the above facts, which were agreed upon, under the declaration, the plaintiff could not recover. Plaintiff brings error, and presents two questions for our consideration:
1. Was the declaration sufficient?
2. Was the plaintiff entitled to recover?
How. Stat. § 7343, provides :
“ If an action of trover be brought for any goods or other things received contrary to the provisions of any statute, the plaintiff shall set forth in his declaration that such goods or other things were converted by the defendant, contrary to the provisions of such statute, referring to the same, as prescribed in the preceding sections.”
The seizure by the sheriff was unlawful. If a portion of the property was exempt, it was the duty of the plaintiff, upon being notified of the levjq to select her exemption, and if she failed to do so, it became the duty of the sheriff to make the selection for her, and it would be a violation of his duty to proceed to a sale without setting out the exempt prop•erty. These duties are pointed out by the statute. It is the •statute which gives the exemption, and points out the duty concerning it.
A sale by the sheriff contrary to the statute, or without ■observing its provisions for the protection of the debtor’s exemption, is a conversion, respecting which he may be regarded as a tort feasor from the beginning, and he may be regarded as having received goods contrary to the provisions of the statute exempting property from sale on execution.
Had the exemption consisted of property exempt from -execution eo nomine, it would be clear that he received the goods contrary to the provisions of the statute; and as the *367exemption exists solely by statute, in suing the officer it would be necessary to count upon the statute in the declaration, in order to admit'proof to show it was exempt from execution. So, in this case, the plaintiff should have declared specially, setting forth the facts which showed the property exempt, and that the property was converted contrary to the provisions of the statute giving her the exemption, referring to the ■same.
But as the proof was all admitted before the objection was made, we think it came too late, and an amendment should have been and will now be permitted in that respect.
The more serious question is whether the plaintiff was •entitled to an exemption of $250 from the stock in trade of the partnership property. It is a settled question in this State that each member of a firm against which execution is levied may claim the statutory exemption from execution: Skinner v. Shannon, 44 Mich. 86; Waite v. Mathews, 50 Id. 393.
The only reasons urged why the plaintiff is not entitled to the benefit of the statute are :
1. That she has drawn from the firm $1,000 which she has applied to her individual use.
2. That she was principally engaged in the occupation of housekeeping, and the statute only allows an exemption in the business in which the debtor is wholly or principally engaged.
The first objection cannot be raised by the defendant. The partnership dealings and adjustment between the partners, or between the partners and creditors, cannot be inquired into in this collateral proceeding, nor does the exemption depend upon whether one partner has drawn out more than his share. This question can only be reached by proceedings in equity, upon an accounting and winding up of the concern.
The second reason stated is not sufficient to bar a recovery. The occupation or business referred to in the statute in \yhich •a party may be engaged is not that of housekeeping. What property would be exempt to a person engaged in carrying on the ordinary duties of housekeeping ?
The record shows that the business of this firm — that -is, merchandising — was the principal business in which she was *368engaged, and that she had no other. I do not think it is necessary that a partner should be an active member of the firm in order to be entitled to his exemption. He may be absent; he may be unable to give his personal attention through illness or inability to render assistance. The law has made no distinction between the active and passive members of a firm. That each should be entitled to his exemption works no harm or hardship to creditors. Every one dealing with a firm has a right to know, and is supposed to inquire, who compose the firm. Creditors give credit to the firm knowing that each partner is entitled to an exemption in a mercantile firm, and rate them accordingly.
Defendant also claims that the plaintiff cannot maintain a separate action for her exemption, but that all the other members are interested in the property as firm property, and must be joined as plaintiffs in the action. But the right of exemption is an individual right, and not a right of the firm as such. This right conferred by statute upon the individual is the basis of the determination that each partner is entitled to his exemption out of the firm property. If his right is individual, he can enforce it separately, and as an individual: Newton v. Howe, 29 Wis. 531; Russell v. Lennon, 39 Id. 570.
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial granted.
The other Justices concurred.