Jordan v. Gower
Jordan v. Gower
Opinion of the Court
Justice, delivered the opinion of the Court.
O. C. Gower, being the head of a family in Davidson County, owned three horses, two of which were exempt from execution. Jordan had two executions against O. C. Gower, which he placed in the hands of W. J. Gower, as a constable. In the absence of O. C. Gower, Jordan and the constable went to his house, and Jordan directed the constable to levy on a bay filly, one of the three horses, and the most valuable. Before the day of sale O. C. Gower claimed the filly as exempt property, and tendered to the constable one of the other horses to be levied on and sold. The constable, being advised that O. C. Gower had the right to select two of the horses as exempt from execution, gave up the filly and took and sold the horse tendered by O. C. Gower. This horse failed to satisfy Jordan’s execution, and he sues the constable for giving up the filly.
The foregoing facts were agreed on by the parties and submitted to the Circuit Judge, a jury being waived. Judge Baxter was of opinion that the creditor, Jordan, had the right to direct the constable upon which of the three horses he should levy, and that O. C. Gower, the owner, had no right to select the two horses to be exempt from execution. Judgment was accordingly given for Jordan, and Gower, the constable, appealed.
It is manifest that when the Act of January 31, 1871, was passed, the settled understanding of the Court and of the profession was, that the right of selection attached to exempted property. Without any abuse of language,. it may be said that this construction had prevailed so long that the right of selection may be regarded as constituting part of the definition of exemption from execution; — the exemption was for the benefit of the debtor, and the enjoyment pre-supposed his right of selecting the articles which he deemed most beneficial.
The question is, did the Legislature,' by the Act of January 31, 1871, intend to take from the debtor the right of selection? There is nothing indicating this intention on the face of the Act, unless it can be implied from the omission of the language used in the Acts of 1820 and 1827, by which the right of selection was expressly conferred. But we have seen that this language was omitted in all the subsequent Acts, and yet that without this language the right of selection was uniformly held to exist. The Act of 1871 was passed for the express purpose of adding to the list of exempted property, and also to do more than “ amend the exemption laws, and to comprise them all in one act,” as indicated in the caption of the law.
We are therefore of opinion that the Circuit Judge erred in his judgment, and the same is reversed and judgment given for defendant below.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.