Laderburg v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
William Laderburg, a merchant conducting a general retail store in Portsmouth, Va., was adjudged a bankrupt on the 10th day of June, 1913. Two days before the adjudication, in contemplation of bankruptcy, he separated from his stock numerous articles of merchandise valued at $867.90, and placed them together with his store fixtures, valued at $145, and his household goods, valued at $113.25, in boxes numbered from 1 to 18. The purpose of thus separating and boxing the goods was to enable the bankrupt to set up the claim that they had ceased to be a part of a shifting stock of merchandise, and could be claimed as exempt from his debts under the Constitution and statutes of Virginia which provide for a homestead exemption, but do not allow it to be claimed in a “shifting stock of merchandise.” Having taken this preliminary step, the bankrupt after the adjudication filed his petition with the referee, asking that the property, including the goods in the boxes, be set apart as his homestead exemption. Attached to the petition was a paper called a homestead deed, in which the property was scheduled, and in which the petitioner declared that he claimed, selected, and set apart the property so scheduled as his homestead. The referee refused to allow the claim as to the merchandise taken from the stock of goods, and his action was confirmed by the District Court. The bankrupt then filed his petition, asking this court, in the exercise of its power of superintendence, and revision, to reverse the judgment and adjudge that he was entitled to the exemption claimed. There was a motion to dismiss the petition, a demurrer and an answer, but questions of pleading were not pressed at the hearing, and we go at once to a decision on the merits.
The Virginia Constitution of 1902, § 190, provides:
“Every householder or bead of a family shall be entitled, in addition to the articles now exempt from levy or distress for rent, to hold exempt from levy, seizure, garnishment, or sale under any execution, order, or other process issued on any demand for a debt hereafter contracted, his real and personal property, or either, including money and debts due him, to the value of not exceeding two thousand dollars, to be selected by him. * * * ”
“The said exemption shall not be claimed or held in a shifting stock of merchandise, or in any property, the conveyance of which by the homestead claimant has been set aside on the ground of fraud or want of consideration.”
These provisions must be read in the light of the constitutional injunction that they shall be liberally construed. The Virginia Code, § 3639, thus indicates the method of setting apart a homestead in personal property:
“Such personal estate shall be selected by the householder and set apart in a writing signed by him. He shall, in the writing, designate and describe with reasonable certainty, the estate so selected and set apart and each parcel or article, affixing to each his cash valuation thereof; and the said writing shall be admitted to record, to be recorded as deeds are recorded, in the county or corporation wherein such householder resides.”
The meaning of the term “shifting stock of merchandise” is too obvious for difference of opinion. It means a stock of merchandise subject to change from time to time in the course of trade, by purchases, sales, or other transactions. The bankrupt’s stock of merchandise was admittedly shifting as long as he kept his store open for trade. Counsel for petitioner earnestly contends, however, that when the debtor took the goods off sale and boxed them, they ceased to be a part of a shifting stock, and became fixed property which the debtor could select as his homestead. It is true that the same articles may be at one time part of a shifting stock and afterwards cease to be so. This change occurs as soon as the articles are purchased by a customer in the usual course of trade, and even when they are taken by the debtor to his home in good faith for customary and reasonable domestic purposes. By changes like these constantly taking place in the ordinary course of business, goods falling without the homestead exemption today may fall within it to-morrow. Not only is this the reasonable construction of the Constitution, but any other would lead to results clearly absurd. But the plain limit to the rule that goods may change from being a part of a shifting stock not subject to exemption into property falling within the exemption is that the change must take place in good faith in the ordinary course of affairs, and not in pursuance of a design to defeat the constitutional provision. The Constitütion safeguards and fixes the limits of the rights of the creditor as well as those of the debtor, and the debtor is as powerless to defeat the rights of the creditor to subject to his debts property not exempt as the creditor is to defeat the rights of the debtor to his homestead exemption in other property.
For. these reasons the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LADERBURG v. MILLER
- Status
- Published