Hawkins v. Mosher
Hawkins v. Mosher
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff in error obtained a judgment against the defendant and another for $150, sued out an execution, served the city of Denver as garnishee. The city answered that it was indebted to defendant in the sum of $70.00, for wages as fireman for the preceding month. Defendant filed a written claim of the exemption of the fund from execution under the statute. A hearing was had, and the court decided fifty per cent ($35.00) to be exempt. Plaintiff in error brings the judgment to this court for review, and insisted that the court erred in exempting the $35.00.
“ Be it Enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado :
“ Section 1. That section one (1) of an act entitled ‘ An Act to Exempt Certain Wages and Earnings of Debtors from Levy and Attachment for Debt/ approved March 28, 1885, be amended so as to read as follows, to-wit: Section 1. There shall be exempt from levy under execution or attachment or garnishment fifty per cent, of the wages or earnings of any debtor earned during the thirty days next preceding such levy under execution, attachment or garnishment of the same; Provided, That in no case shall the amount so exempted be less than thirty dollars; Provided Further, Such debtor shall, at the time of such levy under execution, attachment or garnishment, be the head of a family or the wife of the head of a family, and such family is dependent, in whole or in part, upon such wages or earnings for support; Provided Further, Thatno debts incurred prior to March 28,1885, shall be affected thereby.”
The following is the act of 1894:
“ Section 1. That sec. 1 of an act entitled ‘ An Act to Exempt Certain Wages and Earnings of Debtors from Levy and Attachment for Debt/ approved March 28, 1885, and acts amendatory thereof, be and the same is hereby amended so as to read as follows, Section 1. There shall be exempt from levy under execution or attachment or garnishment sixty dollars ($60.00) of the amount due for wages or earnings of any debtor at the time such levy is made, under execution, attachment or garnishment of the same. * * * Provided further thatno debts incurred prior to March 1,1894, shall be affected thereby.”
The provision of the law of 1889, requiring the claimant
The humane policy of laws of exemption for the benefit of a family had so appealed to legislators that the benefits of exemption have been extended instead of restricted, and in most instances the law of 1894 would have that effect. We cannot conceive the intention of the legislature to have been a repeal that would cut off all exemption of wages from debts contracted before its passage. We think the last provision of the act of 1894 a saving clause, leaving the amount of exemption against debts contracted before its passage unaffected and to be determined under the preexisting act. The judgment of the court in so holding was correct and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.