Broach v. Powell

3 S.E. 763, 79 Ga. 79, 1887 Ga. LEXIS 166
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 16, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 S.E. 763 (Broach v. Powell) 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
Broach v. Powell, 3 S.E. 763, 79 Ga. 79, 1887 Ga. LEXIS 166 (Ga. 1887).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

In 1874, a mortgage was executed upon a thousand acres of land, to secure a debt of $1,900. The mortgage deed contained a waiver in these terms: “I hereby waive all right to homestead in the above described land.” In August, 1876, the mortgagor married.- In October thereafter he was adjudicated a bankrupt on his own petition. Afterwards, in the same month, the mortgagee commenced proceedings against him in the superior court to foreclose the mortgage. A petition was filed and a rule nisi granted. Personal service of the rule was effected upon the mortgagor in December of that year. At what precise date does not appear, but doubtless soon after his appointment, the assignee in bankruptcy laid off and set apart to the bankrupt six hundred acres of the mortgaged land as [80]*80exempt, and rented to him for the years 1877 and 1S78 the other four hundred acres. In January, 1877, the assignee caused a written notice to be served on the mortgagee that application would be made on a certain day to the register in bankruptcy for an order to sell all the real estate of the bankrupt, free from lións and incumbrances. On the specified day, which was in February, 1877, the register, passed an order for a sale of the four hundred acres, free from liens and incumbrances. Five days later this order was approved by the district judge. No sale, however, took place, and the bankrupt remained in possession of the whole tract, both the exempt and the non-exempt parcels.

The rule to foreclose was returnable to the April term, #1877, of the superior court. During that term, on April 17th, the bankrupt, in answer to the rule, filed certain pleas, amongst them one setting up that the court ought not to foreclose the mortgage, because of the bankruptcy. There was no express objection to the jurisdiction, but rather the jurisdiction was by implication admitted and submitted to ; for in his pleas, the bankrupt alleged that equitably the part of the land exempted to him in bankruptcy as a homestead ought not to be sold until the other part had been sold. The pleas were all demurred to and stricken, and on-the 18th of April, a rule absolute was granted foreclosing the mortgage.

On the 26th of April, aj%.fa. was issued upon this judgment of foreclosure. In January, 1878, the mortgagor had set apart to him by the ordinary of the county, under the State law, a homestead covering the same premises, the same six hundred acres, that had previously been set apart to him as exempt by the assignee in bankruptcy. .In March, 1878, the bankrupt was discharged from his debts in terms of the bankrupt law. This mortgage debt was never proved in bankruptcy, nor otherwise referred to that jurisdiction for allowance or adjustment. In March, 1886, the mortgage fi. fa. was levied upon the whole of the mort[81]*81gaged premises; and in April following, an affidavit of illegality to thefi.fa. and the levy was presented by the mortgagor; which being overruled, this writ of error was brought.

The grounds of the affidavit relied on here were two : (1) that the bankruptcy proceedings, as a whole, deprived the superior court of j urisdiction to render a j udgment of foreclosure upon the mortgage; (2) that if the foreclosure was proper and legal, the premises set apart as exempt in bankruptcy, and afterwards set apart as a homestead by the ordinary, are not subject to sale now. The latter brings up the effect of waiving, in the mortgage deed, “ all right to homestead,” and will be considered first.

1. The right to homestead or exemption is personal to the debtor, the owner of the property; and its exercise or non-exercise is subject to his decision. Bowen vs. Bowen, 55 Ga. 182. That he can make his decision by waiver as to specific property at the time of creating a lien upon it for securing a debt, is firmly established. Simmons vs. Anderson, 56 Ga. 53; (approved in Stafford vs. Elliott, 59 Ga. 838); Allen vs. Frost, Id. 558; Flanders vs. Wells, 61 Id. 195; Smith vs. Shepheard, 63 Id. 454; Jackson vs. Parrott, 67 Id. 210. Under the constitution of 1877, he can even affect all his property (save the small amount expressly excepted in the constitution) by a general waiver. Flemister vs. Phillips, 65 Ga. 676; Boroughs vs. White, 69 Id. 842. This, being an enlargement of the right and power to waive, indicates a liberal public policy in behalf of waiver. For, prior to the new constitution, a general waiver was ineffectual. Stafford vs. Elliott (supra), 59 Ga. 837; approved and applied in Green vs. Watson, 75 Id. 472, 473.

According to this unbroken line of authority, the waiver contained in the mortgage now before us, if treated as a waiver at all, renders the mortgage superior to th,e homestead granted by the ordinary in January, 1878, some four years after the mortgage was executed. And the exemp[82]*82tion. in bankruptcy left the title of the debtor to the exempted land precisely as it was before. Bush vs. Lester, 55 Ga. 581; Farmer vs. Taylor, 56 Id. 559; Broach v. Barfield, 57 Id. 604; Burtz vs. Robinson, 59 Id. 763; Laramore vs. McKinzie, 60 Id. 534; Brady vs. Brady, 67 Id. 308; Felker vs. Crane, 70 Id. 484; Anderson vs. Brown, 72 Id. 713. The bankrupt law, in and of itself, afforded the land no protection whatever against the specific lien upon it created by mortgage, notwithstanding it was duly set apart as the bankrupt’s exemption. Long vs. Bullard, 112 U. S. 617. This court, however, construing the bankrupt law and the State law together, has, by a very liberal construction, determined that as to exemptions in bankruptcy measured by the latter (and so are all exemptions of land), the due setting apart in bankruptcy has the same effect in holding off prior liens (that is, liens existing at the time of the adjudication), as would a regular setting apart by proceedings before the ordinary in the method prescribed by our own statute. Rushing vs. Gause, 41 Ga. 180; Bush vs. Lester (supra), 55 Id. 582 ; Benedict vs. Webb, 57 Id. 348; Ross vs. Worsham, 65 Id. 624; Brady vs. Brady, 71 Id. 71; Collier vs. Simpson, 71 Id. 697. This rule, applied to specific liens, certainly goes quite far enough in giving effect to exemption obtained in bankruptcy. In view of the express provisions ’ of the bankrupt act, and of the construction placed thereon by the Supreme Court of the United States, it would be absurd to hold that such an exemption would be more efficacious against a mortgage lien than would be a homestead procured before the ordinary. The result is, that both together will count for no more in the present case than would either one separately, and that if the waiver in question will prevail over either it will prevail over both.

We have already seen that if treated as a waiver at all, it will prevail.' The only question not decisively ruled by the foregoing authorities is, whether it can be so treated. And why can it not ? The sole reason urged in' the argu[83]*83ment was, that the mortgagor, not having married until after the mortgage was executed, was not the head of a family when he executed the mortgage and made the waiver.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.E. 763, 79 Ga. 79, 1887 Ga. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broach-v-powell-ga-1887.