Court Opinion

ID: 6511771
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:23:01.757786+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:54.151893
License: Public Domain

STONE, J.-
— -Our constitution and statutes have exempted the homestead and certain personal property (up to a certain value), of the residents of this State, from liability to execution, or other process for the collection of debts. These exemptions, however, do not operate ew proprio vigore. To be *462available, they must be asserted in proper time. In Sherry v. Brown, 66 Ala. 51, speaking on this question, we said : “Homestead exemptions, as well as exemptions of personal property, have always been construed by our courts as mere personal privileges, which may be, and are held to be waived, unless claimed at the time, and in the manner 'prescribed by law.” And in Block v. Bragg, 68 Ala. 291, we defined, to some extent, what was necessary for the assertion of a valid claim of exemption.
Prior to the act of 18YY, revising our exemption laws, we had very meagre provisions for asserting the right of exemption, and scarcely any statutory directions for controverting such right. That statute undertook to supply the necessary machinery. Section 2828 of the Code of 18Y6 provides for a claim of exemption, and a record to be made of it, before any levy or seizure is made. When this is done, no creditor can have the property seized, or levied upon, without first making affidavit, and giving bond, as prescribed in section 2830 of the Code. Put the claimant of exemption was not required to resort to this method.of asserting his claim. He could wait until after the levy was made, without thereby waiving his right to make the claim. Section 2834 of the Code declares how the claim shall be asserted, in such case. It may then be asserted “in writing, under oath, as provided in section 2828, which shall be lodged with the officer making the levy.” This constitutes a valid assertion of claim in such conditions, and not only, authorizes, but requires the officer making the levy, to desist from further execution, until certain proceedings therein prescribed are had. And this section clearly shows why it is that the affidavit of claim shall be lodged with the officer making the levy.- It is his authority — his only authority — • for suspending further execution. It is more: it is the initiatory step in the contest of the claim, should- the plaintiff in execution elect to contest. It is the mode the law prescribes, for notifying the levying officer that the claim is-made; and when the written affidavit of claim is lodged with him, the claimant has nothing further to do, at that stage of the proceeding. This suspends the execution, and it then becomes the duty of the officer, within three days after the lodgment of such claim with him, to give to the plaintiff, his agent, or attorney, written notice of such claim, who may, within ten days thereafter, contest such claim. Failing to contest within the ten days, it is the duty of the officer to discharge the levy, and restore the property to the defendant. Now, it is manifest that, under'this statute, the plaintiff in execution is entitled to notice — ten days notice — -that property he has had levied on is claimed as exempt, before the levy can be discharged. The *463levying officer must give this notice, and failing to do so in a proper case, he would be guilty of official misconduct,'fixing a liability on himself; and hence, it is equally manifest, that the affidavit of claim should be lodged with him, before he could be required, or would even be authorized, to suspend execution, or to serve notice of claim on the plaintiff, his agent, or attorney. It follows from this, that there can be no valid claim of exemption, under section 2834 of the Code, until the affidavit asserting it is lodged with the officer making the levy.
According to the averments of the petition for stopersedeas, the claim was not interposed, nor the affidavit made, until after the sheriff had.levied, and the defendant had executed a forthcoming bond. It was then too late to make claim under section 2828 of the Code, and make that claim effective against the execution in this case. The claim, after levy, could only be made, by conforming to section -2834 of the Code. This requires that the affidavit of claim shall be lodged with the officer making the levy. The petition not only fails to show this was done, but the necessary implication is that it was not done ; at least, until after the forth-coming bond was returned forfeited, and an execution issued thereon. Notifying the sheriff that he, defendant, had filed his schedule of exemptions, was not enough. This did not authorize suspension of the execution, nor require the sheriff to notify the plaintiff in execution that a claim of exemptions had been interposed. In fact, no such claim had been interposed, in the form and manner the law requires.
It may admit of question, whether a valid claim of exemption can be interposed, while the property remains with the defendant under a forth-coming bond. Difficulties might arise in the matter of executing bond under section 2836 of the Code. Possibly, the proper practice in such case would be, to first surrender the property in discharge of the forth-coming bond, and then make the affidavit of claim. But we need not decide this.
The judgment of the Circuit Court, sustaining the démurrer to the petition for supersedeas, is affirmed.