In Re Trammell

5 F.2d 326, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1030
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 24, 1925
Docket2143, 10761
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 F.2d 326 (In Re Trammell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Trammell, 5 F.2d 326, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1030 (N.D. Ga. 1925).

Opinion

SIBLEY, District Judge.

Trammell is a voluntary bankrupt who in his schedules claimed as exempt property of the value allowed by the Constitution of Georgia. Miller Shoe Store, a partnership, is an involuntary bankrupt, the partners in which have, in their duly filed schedules, similarly made claims of exemptions. None of the claimants had, at the time of filing of the bankruptcy petition, or at the time of adjudication, secured any setting apart of exempt property before the state tribunals, nor had made any application therefor. The referee^ in the former ease, on the authority of White v. Stump, 45 S. Ct. 103, 69 L. Ed. -, October term, 1924, refused to allow any exemption in the bankruptcy court. The referee in the latter ease allowed exemptions, thinking the Stump Case not controlling.

In White v. Stump, supra, three things are settled: (1) The state laws existing when the petition was filed are the measure of the right to exemptions in bankruptcy. (2) The date of the filing of the petition is the time as of which the right of exemption under the state law must have existed. (3) Under the Idaho law there was no right of exemption for land which had not been actually registered as a homestead before the filing of the bankruptcy petition. The first two propositions are general and apply here. The force of the third depends on a comparison of the laws of Idaho with those of Georgia.

Let it be remembered that a “homestead” and an “exemption” are quite different things. A “homestead” is properly “the home place — the home and the adjoining land.” Bouvier, Law Dict. (3d Ed.). It is therefore realty. When established according to statutory requirements, it is commonly made exempt from forced sale, and the family is often given special rights in it. An “exemption” is “the right given by law to a debtor to retain a portion of his property without its being liable to execution at the suit of a creditor or to distress for rent.” Bouvier, Law Dict. (3d Ed.). This right of the debtor may refer to realty, personalty, or both. The Bankruptcy Act nowhere mentions homesteads, but refers to and deals with exemptions only. The statutes of Idaho disclose a direct and absolute exemption from execution of certain kinds of personal property, Comp. Stat. 1919, § 6920. By section 5437 provision is made for the erection of a homestead of realty, and by section 5440 one of- the incidents following thereon is that the homestead is partly exempt from sale on execution. This exemption is incidental, and exists only when the homestead has been fully established. As is clearly pointed out in White v. Stump, supra, the establishment of the homestead requires the execution and acknowledgment and filing for record of a declaration thereof. “The exemption arises when the declaration is filed, and not before. Up to that time the land is subject to execution and attachment like other land; and where a levy is effected while the land is in that condition the subsequent malting and filing of a declaration neither avoids the levy nor prevents a sale under it.” This has been frequently held in other states having similar homesteads. 21 Cyc. p. 514. By the report of the Stump Case in (C. C. A.) 284 E. at page 200, it appears that Stump was allowed his exemption of personalty without question. His wife was denied an exemption in realty because it -was not a homestead, with the incident of exemption, when the bankruptcy petition was filed and when the trustee’s rights in behalf of creditors attached.

In Georgia there is no true home *328 stead. That term is freely used in the headings of code sections and in judicial decisions, hut the language of the Legislature in establishing the ancient “short homestead,” now Code, § 3416, and following, and of the Constitution of 1877, establishing the alternative “constitutional homestead,” uses the more accurate expression “exemption”' and “property set apart.” In both provisions there is the direct exemption of property from sale, without regard to residence or home, and either of realty or personalty. Exemption is not an incident, but the principal enactment. The incidental matter is rather the establishment, after the setting apart, of certain rights in the dependents as beneficiaries and the imposing of certain disabilities on the debtor. The effective language of the former provision is: “The following property of every debtor who is the head of a family, shall he exempt from levy and sale by virtue of any process whatever, * * a but it shall remain for the use and benefit of the family of the debtor.” The provision of the Constitution, art. 9, § 1, is: “There shall he exempt from levy and sale, by virtue of any process whatever under the laws of this state, except as hereinafter excepted, of the property of every head of a family * * * realty or personalty, or both, to the value in the aggregate of sixteen hundred dollars.” Both exemptions must be “set apart.” After setting apart, it is a trespass either to levy on, or, having levied, to sell, the exempt property, and the sale is void. The exemptions may be waived before setting apart .(Constitution, art. 9, §§ 3 and 5), but after-wards the exempt property cannot be alienated or incumbered by the debtor. Thereafter the dependents become “beneficiaries” and have what is referred to in the decisions as a “homestead estate” and the debtor a “reversion.” This twofold aspect of Georgia homesteads, first as a debtor’s exemption from sale, and second as resulting in the establishment of certain rights or estates in third persons as beneficiaries, must not be lost sight of. The Georgia decisions are too numerous to review. It has always been held that the “setting apart” of the exempt property, while necessary to defeat a sale, was in time between levy and sale. An application for setting apart pending at the time of sale, by a sort of lis pendens, affects the sale with the results of the application. Kilgore v. Beck, 40 Ga. 293; Blivins v. Johnson, 40 Ga. 297.

The right of exemption affects the debtor’s whole property as an inchoate in-cumbrance created by law, and so could not be increased as to debts in existence without violating the contract clause of the federal Constitution. Gunn v. Barry, 15 Wall. 610, 21 L. Ed. 212. The setting apart is a mere identification of the property to which it shall be applied, the burden of securing which is put on the debtor. Compare Gheen v. Summey, 80 N. C. 187. This identification for a bankrupt debtor has always been an unquestioned function of the bankruptcy eourt, when not previously accomplished in the state tribunal. The question has rather been whether an identification and valuation by the state court would bind the bankruptcy eourt. The Bankruptcy Act of 1867, in section 14 (14 Stat. 522), contained provisions as to exemptions under state laws and the recognition of them in bankruptcy which are comparable to those of the present law. The Georgia Constitution of 1868 (article 7, § 1) provided a homestead exemption similar to the present one in material respects. Thereunder it was promptly held by the state courts that a setting apart in the bankruptcy eourt without aetion in a state eourt effectuated the debtor’s exemption. Bushin v. Gause, 41 Ga. 180. Indeed, it was held that pending the bankruptcy proceedings, the state tribunal should hot act to effectuate the rights of the dependents (Woolfolk v. Murray, 44 Ga. 133), though by proceeding in the state court afterwards these rights might be matured in the property set apart in the bankruptcy eourt (Colquitt v. Brown, 63 Ga. 440).

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Bluebook (online)
5 F.2d 326, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trammell-gand-1925.