This is a petition of S. H. Richardson for exemption to be allowed out of copartnership assets. At an early day ibis court held that, when there was no individual estate, exemptions could be allowed out of the copartnership assets. Based on technical grounds as to the legal character of copartnership estates, several United States district courts have refused to allow such exemptions; while other United States district courts have maintained the same views early announced by this court, resting their conclusions upon the scope and design, not only of state exemption acts, but of the more liberal provisions of the bankrupt act [of 1867 (14 Stat. 517)]. If a review were had of the various state acts and the decisions thereon, a more elaborate consideration of the policy of each state upon the subject would be needed than time presents, or than is necessary for this case. The bankrupt act contemplates that each bankrupt shall not only be put in no worse condition than he occupied previously by force of state statutes, but that he shall also have the benefit of its own humane provisions. Its manifest purpose is to leave him, on the suirender of all his assets for the benefit of his creditors, a sufficient amount, according to his condition in society, not to be reduced to instant and abject destitution, whereby he, and, it may be, his dependent and helpless family are stripped of food and home, and the means of procuring either. That act has at least this twofold object: First, to enable all the creditors to share equally in his assets; and, second, while discharging him, being honest and unfortunate, from the further obligation of his debts, to leave him some provision for himself and family until he can start anew lit life. The liberal view to be taken of that act is illustrated in the case of Cox v. Wilder [Case No. 3,308], in which the United States circuit court overruled this court in the case even of a fraudulent conveyance. ■ If, despite such a conveyance by husband and wife, they are, on its being set aside as fraudulent against creditors, reinstated in their homestead and dower rights, why not a fortiori, the needed or prescribed exemptions, in the absence of fraud, out of any assets in which the debtor was interested. But it is urged that the individual interest of a partner in copartnership assets is only in the surplus after copartnership. debts are paid; but is not the. grantor in a fraudulent ■ conveyance, that is, fraudulent as to creditors,, estopped from assailing the grant? If his creditors can set it aside for their own benefit, although it was valid as between the parties thereto, and the ground on which they can thus do so is that they have an interest in their debtor’s property entitling them to subject it to the payment of their demands, and notwithstanding their rights and the acts of the grantor, he, when the creditors have divested the grantee, is remitted to his original position as to homestead and other-exemptions in said property, why should not said debtor, despite his creditors’ interest in copartnership assets, or the interest of copartnership creditors therein, still retain out of the copartnership assets, the amount of exemptions intended for the benefit of himself and family? If his individual estate is large enough to furnish the required exemptions, it should be alone subject thereto, just as his individual debts are primarily chargeable to his private estate. His individual creditors, if there is a surplus in the co-partnership estate, receive the benefit thereof if the private estate is deficient, and viceversa. The copartnership creditors, if not paid out of the copartnership fund, have the benefit of the private estate if not exhausted in individual debts. Hence the technical rules as to the relationship of copartnership and individual creditors with respect to copart-nership and private estates, if properly applied to exemptions, would remit the debtor to his private estate primarily, and, if that were insufficient, then to the copartnership estate. So far is the principle underlying the rule from defeating the humane doctrine contended for that logically it requires that doctrine to be asserted. The exemptions are for the “debtor’s benefit,” and apply to all his property, irrespective of the fact that creditors or others may have an interest therein. As among classes of creditors, individual and copartnership, they are permitted, as among themselves, to proceed against one or the other fund, respectively, and against both in certain contingencies; why, therefore, is not the debtor, under like contingencies, entitled to the same benefit? *699There is nothing in the state statutes, or in the bankrupt act, to the contrary; and if we observe their scope and object, instead of narrowing the question to mere technical rules, we give due force to the wise and humane provisions of the law. This line of reasoning might be pursued to greater length, but enough has been said to vindicate the prior rulings of this court on the .question. The exemptions claimed must be allowed.