WILLSON, C. J.
The suit was by appellant against appellees to recover the possession of a mule colt, or, in the alternative, the value thereof, alleged to be the sum of $125. In the justice court the judgment was in appellant’s favor, but in the county court, to which an appeal was prosecuted, the judgment was in favor of appellees. It seems that one John Rogers died intestate, owning, besides real estate, certain personal property, consisting of horses, mules, and money. Appellant was one of his heirs, and by a power of attorney, in the execution of which he was joined by the other heirs, authorized one McLean and one Barnett to take possession of the property belonging to *69the estate of John Rogers, and, after paying such debts as John Rogers owed at the time he died, to partition among his heirs the property remaining in their hands. In March, 1909, McLean and Barnett made a partition of property belonging to said es•tate, allotting and delivering to appellant, as the part of the property he was entitled to in the partition, a mare and the colt in controversy in this suit. Prior to the time this partition was made, it seems that certain creditors of appellant, by writs of garnishment against McLean and Barnett, sought to impound in their hands appellant’s interest in said estate, and that the garnishment proceedings were pending at the time the partition was made. McLean testified that, when he and Barnett turned the colt in controversy over to appellant, it was understood between him and them “that he was to take it conditionally; that there was a garnishment against the bank and some debts also that had to be settled.” Barnett testified that he and McLean turned the colt over to appellant "as his property, to hold until the debts were settled, and if it took the mule colt to settle the debts he was not to have it.” Afterwards, while the mare and colt were in appellant’s possession, they were levied on by a constable by virtue of executions against appellant and an execution against McLean and Barnett as his garnishees. At the sale under the executions appellees were the purchasers of the colt. At the time the mare and colt were levied on, appellant was the head of a family and owned only one other animal of the horse kind. He testified, and his testimony was not contradicted by that of any other witness, that, when the constable came to his home to make a levy, he told the constable he could take the mare, but that he could not take the colt — that “under the law he could not take it.” It was shown by other uncontradicted testimony that at the constable’s sale notice was given by appellant’s attorneys that he claimed the colt as exempt to him under the law.
[1] From the statement made it is obvious that the judgment should have been in appellant’s favor, unless the contention made that he was not entitled to claim the colt as exempt from forced sale for the payment of his debts to the plaintiffs in the executions, because of the condition upon which McLean and Barnett testified same was delivered to him, is tenable. Sayles’ Stat. art. 2395; Hall v. Miller, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 336, 51 S. W. 36; Yancy v. Felker, 3 Willson, Civ. Cas. Ct. App. § 249, page 304; 2 Freeman on Executions, § 215a. We do not think the contention is tenable. It may be that as a result of the understanding between appellee and McLean and Barnett, as testified to by them, a lien was created on the colt in their favor to indemnify them against a liability which might be fixed against them as appellee’s garnishees. And it may be, if they had been before the court asserting such a lien, that appellee should not have been heard to say that the colt was exempt to him as against their claim. But McLean and Barnett were not parties to the suit, and appellees did not pretend that they had in any way acquired and were asserting rights which may have existed in favor of said McLean and Barnett as lienors. Their contention seems to have been that McLean and Barnett, because of the understanding referred to, had a claim on the colt superior to that of appellant based on the exemption laws, and that because they had, appellant was not entitled to claim the colt as exempt to him as against the claims of any of his creditors. We do not understand the law to be that, when an owner voluntarily creates a lien in favor of one of his creditors against personal property he is entitled to claim as exempt, he thereby deprives himself of the right as against other of his creditors to assert the exemption. He is entitled, we think, to assert the exemption as against any one of his creditors who has not a lien voluntarily created by him (the owner) against the property. Sayles’ Stat. art. 2402.
The assignments are all sustained, and the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.