Coker v. Utter
This text of 108 S.E. 538 (Coker v. Utter) 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.
Opinions
1. A lien creditor by proving his claim does not waive, nor is he estopped from asserting, his lien in a court of competent jurisdiction against the property which the court of bankruptcy -has not the jurisdiction to administer for the benefit of creditors. McBride v. Gibbs, 148 Ga. 380 (96 S. E. 1004).
2. The effect of § 67f of the national bankruptcy act of 1898 is not to void the levies and liens therein referred to against all the world, but [158]*158only as against the trustee in bankruptcy and those claiming under him, in order that the property may pass to and be distributed among the creditors of the bankrupt. It is applicable only as against such trustee, and was designed to prevent preferences between creditors. A discharge in bankruptcy does not discharge the lien of a judgment obtained within four months prior to the adjudication of bankruptcy, upon a note waiving the homestead exemption allowed by the laws of this State upon lands set aside by the bankrupt court as exempt. McKenney v. Cheney, 118 Ga. 387 (45 S. E. 433).
[158]*1583. While it was competent for the plaintiff in error to file an amendment to his answer after the case was submitted to the judge, so as to give efficacy to any fact that might have been proved or admitted at the hearing, the rejection of the amendment in the present case was not hurtful to the plaintiff in error, inasmuch as the allegations of the amendment, so far as they were supported by evidence, did not materially change the controlling issues as they stood when the case was submitted to the judge.
4. The request to review and over-rule the ease of McKenney v. Cheney, supra, is denied. While the ruling made in that case may not be in harmony with all of the dicta in the case of C., B. & Q. Ry. Co. v. Hall, 229 U. S. 511 (33 Sup. Ct. 885, 57 L. ed. 1306), it is not necessarily in conflict with the decision in that case upon the issues actually involved, as in the present case the judgment sought to be enforced is based upon a promissory note containing a waiver of homestead, and it was otherwise in the case last cited.
5. Applying what is said in the foregoing headnotes, the court below did not err in rendering the judgment complained of.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
108 S.E. 538, 152 Ga. 157, 1921 Ga. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-utter-ga-1921.