Court Opinion

ID: 3679550
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:25:15.320901+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:27:36.826258
License: Public Domain

The action was in part against the defendant sheriff, to compel the sale of certain goods levied on under an execution in plaintiff's favor against defendant S. A. Gardner, judgment debtor, and without setting apart the personal property exemptions of said Gardner, as requested by him, and also to recover certain penalties against said sheriff by reason of other defaults in the enforcement of said process. The claim for specific penalties having been withdrawn, the demurrer of the sheriff to plaintiff's first cause of action was sustained, and plaintiff, having duly excepted, appealed.
There were other facts stated in the complaint looking to further recovery by plaintiff against S. A. Gardner, vendor, and his codefendant, R. E. Fulford, vendee, arising by reason of a sale of goods from the former to the latter without any compliance with the requirements of the statute regulating taxes of merchandise in bulk, as set forth in Pell's Revisal, 964a, amended by Laws 1913, Extra Session, ch. 66; Gregory's Supp., p. 108; but, as judgment on that feature of *Page 128 
the case was rendered against said defendants and they do not appeal, the questions relevant to the claim against these parties is not presented.
It appears from the complaint that S. A. Gardner, a retail merchant, in October, 1916, sold his stock of goods in bulk to his codefendant R. E. Fulford without in any way complying with the requirements of the statute regulating such sales, Pell's Revisal, sec. 964a, and Gregory's Supp., same section, p. 108; that plaintiff, a creditor of the vendor, by reason of goods sold, delivered and unpaid for, instituted his action before a justice of the peace and recovered judgment for the then debt, $78.76 and costs, and that execution thereon having been placed in the hands of the defendant sheriff, he levied on the stock of goods remaining unsold and thereupon the fraudulent vendor, having requested that his personal property exemption be set apart to him, the sheriff, demanding that his fees for the purpose be paid by plaintiff, a position allowed by the law (Lute v. Reiley, 65 N.C. 20), except when the suit is in forma pauperis, Revisal, sec. 1275, declined to proceed further without the setting apart of the exemption as claimed.
It appeared, further, from the complaint that Gardner was insolvent and had no property other than the interest that might arise to him on their goods or the balance due on the purchase price, and further, that Fulford is also insolvent, the amount of goods remaining on hand and in his possession at the time of levy being about $125.
Upon these facts, admitted by the demurrer to be true, we concur in the view of the court below and are of opinion that the vendor is entitled to his exemption and the sheriff was justified in refusing to proceed further till such exemptions were properly set apart.
Prior to the enactment of the "sales in bulk" statute, it has been repeatedly held with us that when an insolvent debtor has made disposition of his property, real or personal, with the fraudulent intent to avoid the payment of his debts and the conveyance has been successfully assailed by the creditors and the property, by judicial proceedings, made available on the vendor's debts, the latter is entitled to his homestead or personal property exemption, or both, according to the nature of the property. Cowanv. Phillips, 122 N.C. 70; Gaster v. Hardie, 75 N.C. 460; Board v. Reiley,75 N.C. 144; Duvall v. Rollins, 71 N.C. 218; Crummen v. Bennet, 68 N.C. 494. *Page 129 
Speaking to the position and the basic reason for it, Chief JusticePearson, in the Crummen case, supra, said: "A makes a conveyance of his land to B, which conveyance is fraudulent and void as against the creditor of A. A. creditor takes judgment and issues execution, treating the conveyance to B as void; can the homestead of A be sold? The creditor treats the conveyance to B as void and of no effect; take that to be so, how can the creditor have any more right against A than he would have had if the conveyance had not been made?       (119) We can see no ground to support the position that an attempt to commit a fraud is a forfeiture of the debtor's homestead; there is no provisions of the kind, either in the Constitution or the statutes."
It has been also held in several well-considered opinions that the legislation regulating the "sales of merchandise in bulk" should be upheld as a valid exercise of the police power, and that a "sale in bulk of a large part or the whole of a stock of merchandise" under the conditions set forth in the statute, without an inventory and proper notice to creditors or without an adequate and proper bond to account for the proceeds, is absolutely void as to creditors and may be made available for their debts and claims. Gallup v. Rozier, 172 N.C. 283; Pennel v. Robinson,164 N.C. 257.
Applying the principle of these various decisions, we see no reason why the position upheld in the first class of cases should not be controlling in the second. In the one, the conveyance is avoided because made with a fraudulent intent. In the other, because of noncompliance with the statutory requirements, but both proceed on the theory that, as to creditors and their claims, the property did not pass, and, if this position is established and the property is held to be still in the debtor, then the incidents of ownership must attach and such debtor becomes entitled to the homestead and personal property exemptions allowed him by the constitution and laws of the State.
In the cases cited and chiefly relied upon by the appellant, Daly v.Drug Co., 127 Tenn. 412, and Marlow v. Ringer, 91 S.E. 386 (W.Va.), the question of the debtor's right to his exemptions was not presented or considered and the decisions do not seem to be apposite to the facts of this record. In those cases, it was held, among other things, that legislation of this character is valid; that the transactions in those particular cases were within the provisions of the statute and that the vendee, in such sale, could be held liable to creditors for the value of the goods sold by him.
This last position seems to have been recognized in the present instance, for we find that judgment has been entered for plaintiff against both the vendor and vendee for the amount of plaintiff's claim, this on *Page 130 
allegation that a large amount of the goods has been sold by the vendee.
As heretofore stated, however, this question is not involved in the present appeal, which was taken from a judgment upholding the vendor's right to his personal property exemptions on final process against the goods and which, as we understand the record, had been levied on as the property of the vendor.
There is no error in this judgment appealed from and the same is
Affirmed.
Cited: Armfield Co. v. Saleeby, 178 N.C. 303; Rubber Co. v. Morris,181 N.C. 186; Casualty Co. v. Dunn, 209 N.C. 737; Kramer Bros. Inc. v.McPherson, 245 N.C. 359.
(120)