Plant v. Gunn

7 F. 751, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2277
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia
DecidedMay 13, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 F. 751 (Plant v. Gunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plant v. Gunn, 7 F. 751, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2277 (circtsdga 1881).

Opinion

This case has been previously reported in 2 Woods, 372, and 94 U. S. 664. The facts necessary to an understanding of the decision in this case, now reported, are as follows:

At the November term, 1866, of the superior court of Bibb county, Georgia, Daniel E. Gunn obtained a verdict against Thomas J. Woolfolk, James H. Woolfolk, and John W. Wool-folk, security, of which the following is a copy:

“We, the jury, find for the plaintiff against the defendants the sum of $11,212, with interest fromApril 14, 1860.”

This verdict was entered on the declaration in the case, and on the same day N. H. Bass, the plaintiff’s attorney, entered up a judgment on the declaration, according to the [753]*753law and practice in Georgia. The following is a copy of the judgment:

Bibb Supkutok Coukt,
November term, 1866.
Principal, §11,212. Interest to-.
Whereupon it' is considered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiil do recover of the defendants, Thomas J. Woolfolk, James IT. Woolfolk, and John W. Woolfolk, the sum of §11,212 for his principal debt, and --dollars and-■ cents for interest to -, and the sum of-dollars and-cents for costs of suit, to be taxed by the clerk; and the defendant be in mercy, etc.
N. H. Bass, Plaintiff's Attorney.

At the same term an execution was issued by the clerk in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants, in which the principal and the interest were both set out, and the following entry was made on the “execution docket:”

N. H. Bass. No. 1. Daniel F. Gunn, Guardian, v. Thomas J. Woolfolk, James H. Woolfolk, and John W. Woolfolk, security.

At the April term, 1871, of said court, the plaintiff obtained leave of the court to amend said judgment so as to include interest, and a judgment was entered up by the plaintiff’s attorney specifying the amount of interest in dollars, and cents; “this judgment for interest to take effect now for then.”

Between the date of the original verdict, judgment, and execution, in November, 1866, and the date of the amended judgment for interest, James II. Woolfolk, one of the defendants, on the seventh day of December, 1868, gave to I. C. Plant & Son a mortgage to secure a debt due to them by the firm of Woolfolk, Walker & Co., of which James H‘. Woolfolk was a member. The consideration of the mortgage was not any credit extended by I. C. Plant & Son at the time, but the securing of an antecedent debt. The mortgage embraced lands of the defendant in execution, James H. Wool-folk, upon which, by the laws of Georgia, the judgment of Daniel I1. Gunn, if valid, was a lien from its date. In 1869 [754]*754the firm of Woolfolk, Walker & Co., composed of' James H. Woolfolk and two other partners, was adjudicated bankrupt; and the estate of James H. Woolfolk was managed by a committee of creditors and a trustee under section 43 of" the bankrupt act. I. C. Plant & Son foreclosed their mortgage and levied the mortgage execution upon the mortgaged premises. Pending the levy, it was agreed between Plant & Son and the trustee in bankruptcy that the property should be sold under the mortgage execution and the proceeds held for distribution in the bankrupt court. The property was sold for $5,834.

The only claim in the bankrupt court which disputed the right of Plant & Son to said proceeds was the judgment of D.F. Gunn against said James H. Woolfolk and others, which had been proved as such in the bankrupt court. This judgment, if valid, was the oldest lien on all the property, real and personal, of James EL Woolfolk. To determine the question of priority between said judgment and mortgage, (and also for the purpose of obtaining an injunction, which is not now a material part of the case,) I. G. Plant & Son filed their bill in the circuit court, alleging the priority of their mortgage lien, because neither the verdict nor judgment of said Daniel F. Gunn had ever been entered on the minutes of the court in which it was rendered. The bill also alleged that James EL Woolfolk was the reputed owner of a large tract of land in Jones county, consisting of 2,100 acres, and which was worth largely more than the entire amount due on the judgment in favor of Gunn, both principal and interest, and which was subject to the lien of said judgment equally with the land on which Plant & Son held a mortgage, and that Gunn should be compelled in' equity to enforce his judgment against the land on which Plant & Son had no lien.

The answer of the defendants set up the priority of the judgment in favor of Gunn; and also set up that the land in Jones county, consisting of 2,100 acres, had been conveyed by James EL Woolfolk to his brother Lowell C. Woolfolk, who claimed the title and possession of the same, and that it could only be made subject to the judgment after a litiga[755]*755tion with Lowell G. Woolfolk; and that for this reason such land was not equally accessible to the lien of petitioners’ judgment.

After the decision of the supreme court was rendered, (94 U. S. 654,) complainants amended their bill, alleging that in the argument of the case before the circuit court it was treated as an undisputed fact that the judgment in favor of Gunn had never been “recorded as required by law,” although the transcript of the record from Bibb superior court offered in evidence before the circuit court, and in the record before the supreme court, contained, inter alia, the judgment, followed by a certificate from the clerk of the superior court that the same “appeared from the records and files of his office,” and that in fact said judgment never had been entered on the book which the clerk of the superior court is required (by section 267, 7 6, of the Code of Georgia) to keep for the “record of all the proceedings in all civil cases within six months after the final determination thereof.”

The amendment further alleged that in the year 1880 the committee of creditors in charge of the estate of James IT. Woolfolk had recovered from Lowell G. Woolfolk the large tract of land in Jones county conveyed to him by James H. Woolfolk, and had sold the same as assets of the bankrupt’s estate for the sum of $15,700, and that this fund, together with the sum of $1,000 already in the hands of the trustee from other sources, was sufficient to pay off the entire j udgment in favor of Gunn, and that this judgment ought in equity to be paid out of that fund upon which it had a lien, and leave to complainants’ mortgage the fund upon which only it had a lien. The amendment also alleged that large payments had been made on the execution and judgment in favor of Gunn, which should be applied solely in reduction of the principal; such payments having been made after the date of complainant’s mortgage, and the mortgage having been taken at a time when there was no subsisting judgment (if any valid judgment at all) for interest; that the amended judgment for interest was not taken until 1871, and could not relate back to the original judgment in 1866, so as to affect com[756]*756plainants’ rights under their mortgage taken in 1868. The payments made were as follows:

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Related

Plant v. Gunn
19 F. Cas. 800 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia, 1874)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. 751, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plant-v-gunn-circtsdga-1881.