Hollinshed v. Woodard
This text of 52 S.E. 815 (Hollinshed v. Woodard) 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.
Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.) When an administrator sells land under a proper order of the court of ordinary, liens thereon are divested and transferred to the fund. Civil Code, §3453; Herrington v. Tolbert, 110 Ga. 528. An administrator can not sell land without an order of the court of ordinary. Civil Code, § 3450. A sale by an executor under an order of the court of ordinary will divest the lien of an existing judgment, unless the property is under levy at the time the sale is1 made. Reed v. Aubrey, 91 Ga. 436. In Bond v. Zeigler, 1 Ga. 324, it was held that when an executor was authorized by will to sell the property of the testator at', private sale for the purpose of paying debts, such a sale would pass a good title to the purchaser, as against the creditors of the estate, provided the purchase was bona fide and without fraud on the part of the purchaser. In this case the. question as to whether liens would be divested by such a sale was not involved. In Harwell v. Foster, 102 Ga. 38, it was held that a sale of land by an administrator or executor under an order of the court of ordinary is in the nature of a judicial sale, but that a sale under authority of a power contained in a will, while legal within the limits prescribed, was in no sense judicial in its character, there being none of the qualities of judicial sanction in a sale by an executor independently of the action of the court adjudicating the necessity therefor. The question involved in that case was whether a claim could be interposed to property which an executor was proceeding to sell under the authority of the will without an order of the court of ordinary.- It was held that the statute in reference to claims at judicial sales did not apply to sales of this character. The general rule is that only judicial sales will have the effect of divesting existing liens. In Mutual Loan & Banking Co. v. Haas, 100 Ga. 111, it was held that a sale under a power in a mortgage would divest the lien of a judgment against 'the mortgagor, rendered after the mortgage had been duly registered. It was said that a sale under such circumstances was the equivalent of a sale under foreclosure by a court of competent jurisdiction. Mr. Chief Justice Simmons in the opinion said: "A creditor of a mortgagor who obtains his judgment subsequently to the execution of a mortgage which has been duly registered takes it subject to the rights of the [723]*723mortgagee; and the power of sale being part of the security, he takes it subject to the exercise of that power. His judgment attaches merely to the equity of redemption. He stands in the shoes of the mortgagor, and can not defeat the exercise of the power any more than the mortgagor himself could.” It may be stated as a general rule that neither a living person nor the legal representative of a dead person can by the sale of property divest the lien of creditors of the owner, unless the sale was judicial in its nature, or the circumstances were such that the lien creditor would be concluded by the instrument in which the power of sale was created.
Judgment affirmed.
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52 S.E. 815, 124 Ga. 721, 1906 Ga. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollinshed-v-woodard-ga-1906.