Barrett & Caswell v. Durham

80 Ga. 336
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 Ga. 336 (Barrett & Caswell v. Durham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett & Caswell v. Durham, 80 Ga. 336 (Ga. 1887).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

It appears from the record that R. M. Young, of Gordon county, executed his note and mortgage to Barrett & Cas[338]*338well, of Augusta, Georgia, for $5,S91.31, on tlie 31st of .August, 1871. Tlie mortgage was given on the following, with other parcels of land, to-wit: The east half of lot :260, all of lot 261, and 100 acres on the west side of 262, in the 14th district and third section of Gordon county. The mortgage was foreclosed on the 26th of August, 1874, for principal and interest, and execution was issued thereon. Young was adjudicated a bankrupt on the 3d of April, 1875, and was discharged on the 17th of December, 1875. The plaintiffs did not prove their claim in bankruptcy. The land above described was set apart by the register in bankruptcy to Young as an exemption. At the time of setting apart the exemption, Young had a wife and several minor children. Young died in the spring of 1878. J. M. Reeves was appointed administrator on his estate at the June term, 1878, of the court of ordinary of Gordon county. At the September term, 1878, of- said court, he obtained an order from the ordinary to sell said land for the purpose of distribution and payment of debts, and did sell it on the first Tuesday in December, 1878, to Foster & Harlan, partners. It appears that the widow of Young .attended said sale and did not object thereto. Foster died in 1881, and Harlan, as surviving partner, sold said land to Durham, the defendant in error, bn the 14th of February, 1883.

When Young died, he left a widow and two minor children. The widow died July 20th, 1883, and the youngest child became of age some time in the year 1885. Foster & Harlan went immediately into possession of the land after the sale in December, 1878, but received no conveyance from the administrator until December 1879, when the purchase money was fully paid. They remained in possession thereof until they sold to Durham in February, 1883, and Durham went into possession and remained on the land up to the time of the levy of the mortgage fi. fa. of Barrett & Caswell, to-wit, April 27th, 1886. The fi.fa. was levied on the east half of lot 260, all of lot 261, and [339]*339100 acres on the west side of lot 262. Durham interposed a claim on the 19th of May, 1886, to the east half of lot 260, and all of 261 which lies west of the public road leading from Calhoun to Rome.

Upon the trial of the case, the jury, under the charge of the court, found the property not subject. The plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial upon the several grounds contained therein, which was overruled by the court, and the plaintiffs excepted, and bring the case to this court for review. The view we take of this case renders it unnecessary to pass upon all the grounds of the motion insisted upon before us.

Exception is made in the 5th ground because the court refused to charge, as requested by-the plaintiffs in writing, as follows: ££ The lien sought to be enforced in this casé was given by Young in his lifetime to the plaintiffs, and I charge you that no sale could be made of this property by the administrator of Young which would divest plaintiffs’ lien.” . . . . . .

The 7th ground of the motion for new trial is, Because the court erred in giving the following charge to the jury: The homestead in evidence set apart by the assignee in the bankrupt court, is a provision for the protection of the beneficiaries of the homestead, in the enjoyment and use of the property, as against the creditors of R. M. Young; and if the beneficiaries acquiesced in the sale of the property by the administrator, the creditors of Young cannot complain as such, and the sale, if otherwise valid, would be good as against the plaintiffs here to pass the title out of the estate of Young. If there was a valid order of the court of ordinary authorizing the sale by the administrator, and the sale was had in every respect in accordance with law, the plaintiffs’ lien in the land would be divested by the administrator’s sale and transferred to the proceeds of the sale in the administrator’s hands.’ ”

We think the court erred in giving this charge and in refusing to give the charge as requested by the plaintiffs. [340]*340This land now claimed by Durham was set apart as an exemption to Young by the bankrupt court. When it was so set apart, it had the same effect in holding off prior liens of creditors, or liens existing at the time of adjudication, as if it had been regularly set apart by a proceeding in the court of ordinary in the methods prescribed by our own State law. This court has so held in numerous cases. See Broach vs. Powell, decided at the last term of this court; Collier vs. Simpson, 74 Ga. 697; Ross vs. Worsham, 65 Ga. 624, and other cases cited in Broach vs. Powell, 79 Ga. 79.

This court has also held that, where a homestead or exemption has been set apart under the laws of Georgia, that homestead or exemption, either under the constitution of 3 86S or under the constitution of 1877, exists as long as the family for whose use it was set apart exists and resides in this State. Nelson vs. The Commercial Bank, Hart vs. Evans; and First National Bank of Chattanooga vs. Massengill, ante, pp. 328, 330, 333.

This land having been set apart as an exemption to Young by the bankrupt court, and Young having at the time a wife and minor children, under the construction put upon said exemption or setting apart by the bankrupt court, this mortgage fi. fa. could not,proceed against this land so long as the wife lived or the minor children were under age. The widow living until 1883, and the youngest child not becoming of age until 3885, the fi.fa. was held off from this exempted property until the latter time, and it would have been illegal for any sheriff in this State to have levied this fi.fa. upon the same.

But it was claimed by the counsel for the defendant in error that the adjudication in bankruptcy did not divest Young’s title to this land, but that the title remained in him the same as if he had never been adjudged a bankrupt. The title remaining in him, Young was authorized to sell the land exempted or set apart to him, and if he could do so, his administrator, who represented him, was authorized [341]*341to sell upon liis obtaining a proper order from the court of ordinary. This construction of (he law we think is correct. Young could have sold this land in his lifetime, but if he had sold it, he would have sold it subject to the lien of this mortgage fi. fa. No sale that he could have made would have divested this lien. If Young could have sold it, liis administrator, upon a proper order, could have sold it, as Young could have done; and all the debts and liens against Young, made subsequent to his discharge in bankruptcy, were represented by the administrator, and when he sold this land, these debts and liens were taken off the land and were placed on the funds in the hands of the administrator, the proceeds of the sale. But the error the court committed on the trial of this case was in treating this lien of Barrett & Caswell as a debt against Young, and holding that the administrator represented Barrett & Caswell as a creditor of Young individually or personally. Thelaw is, that when Young was discharged inbankruptcy, the debt, the foundation of the lien, was also discharged as a debt against Young personally; but the bankrupt law expressly retains the lien of the mortgage on this land.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ga. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-caswell-v-durham-ga-1887.