Gregg v. Brickley
Gregg v. Brickley
Opinion of the Court
— The finding of'the trial court that the appellant was not entitled to exemption of his property, not exceeding in value $600, from liability under a judgment on contract rendered in Wells county against him in favor of the appéllee, is questioned on the grounds assigned in the appellant’s motion for a new trial, that the decision was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to law; and the only question argued by the appellant (there being no brief for the appellee) is whether, under the evidence, the court should not have found that the appellant was a resident householder of this State within the meaning of the statute 'providing for such exemption.
The application for exemption was filed in June, 1899,. and the trial was had in the following December. There was evidence that the appellant was forty years of age; that he had been married, but his wife died five years before the trial, leaving their five children, who still were living. It does not appear, except by inference, in what county the appellant resided before his wife’s death. He had resided in Indiana all his life. At some time after his wife’s death he had resided temporarily at Bluffton, Wells county. At the time of the trial he was a resident of Van Burén, Grant county, and had resided there for three years, employed at pumping in the oil field. During the last preceding six months he had received $60 per month, and before that period he had received $45 per month. His oldest child, a boy of eighteen years, was living in Colorado; his second child, a boy of sixteen years, was living in Wells county. These two provided for themselves, and the appellant did not
It is true and well established that the statute which effectuates the purpose expressed in the Constitution of recognizing “the privilege of the debtor to enjoy the necessary comforts of life,” and which confines the privilege to “any resident householder,” is to be liberally construed with a constant view of accomplishing, in cases coming within the spirit of the enactment, the beneficent intention of such legislation, but we fear it would be extending the protection to an unwarrantable degree to allow exemption to the appellant. He is an inhabitant of Grant county, and does not appear to be a householder there. It is not shown that he is there temporarily, but he is a resident of that county, and not elsewhere. He is a father, but he is not the head of any household.
As to his two elder sons, there can be no question that they are not members of a household of which he is the head, and as to his three younger children, it appears that they are members of the household of their grandmother, to whom the appellant has in effect abdicated his paternal control, and to whose care and support he has practically abandoned them. The irregular and infrequent bestowal of compara-' tively diminutive gifts can not properly be regarded as support of a family, or as constituting the appellant as the head of a family of which these children are members. It does not appear that to grant the appellant the exemption claimed would enable a family to enjoy any of the necessary comforts of life. His past conduct would rather support the expectation that he would enjoy the exemption as an individual merely, without being impelled by obligation or necessity to contribute from the exempted amount to any other person. As was remarked in Green v. Simon, 17 Ind.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.