Walden v. Brantley Co.

42 S.E. 503, 116 Ga. 298, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 9, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 503 (Walden v. Brantley Co.) 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
Walden v. Brantley Co., 42 S.E. 503, 116 Ga. 298, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 88 (Ga. 1902).

Opinion

Little, J.

Walden as head of a family sought to enjoin the. Brantley Company from selling a house and lot in the city of Way-cross. By his petition he made substantially the following case: In March, 1877, he had set apart to him, as the head of a family, a homestead of realty and personalty, the realty being a certain place whereon he then resided. Thereafter, in 1881, under an order granted by the judge of the superior court the realty and some of the personalty exempted were sold, and the proceeds were reinvested in a house and lot on Albany avenue in the city of Waycross. In 1899 that property was exchanged for the house and lot situated on the northwest corner of Isabella and Remshart streets in the same city. He removed his family there, and that has been their home continuously to this day. This last-named property was purchased with the proceeds of the homestead which had been regularly set apart to him. The deed conveying this property to petitioner was made by A. L. Johnson. It conveyed the land directly to petitioner, and was duly witnessed and recorded. In the [299]*299year 1901 petitioner and C. T. Walden, his brother, engaged in the naval stores and turpentine business in Clinch county and bargained for a turpentine plant from one Guthrie, who was indebted to the A. P. Brantley Company. Guthrie sold this plant to the petitioner and his brother and took their promissory notes in payment therefor. These notes Guthrie transferred to his creditors, and in th at way the Brantley Company came in to possession of th em. Petitioner and his brother borrowed $500 from the Brantley Company, and executed a mortgage to secure the notes so transferred, as well as the $500 borrowed, covering certain property, among which was the property in question. The petitioner alleged that he had no right to execute that mortgage, and that the Brantley Company knew or ought to have known such fact, as the property was homestead' property; that the mortgage given contained a power of sale and the Brantley Company were proceeding under that power to sell, were advertising all of the property described in the mortgage, and, if not restrained, would sell the house and lot in Waycross. Waiving discovery, petitioner asked for an injunction to restrain the Brantley Company from selling the house and lot before described. To this petition were attached copies of the homestead proceedings, which were regular on their face, and set apart certain described property as an exemption of personalty and realty. On the presentation of this petition, a temporary restraining order was granted and a rule nisi directed to issue.

The defendant answered, setting up the fact that petitioner and his brother had borrowed $500 from it, and had executed a mortgage to secure this sum, together with certain promissory notes which it held against the firm of C. E. and C. T. Walden. It denied that the realty described in the mortgage was obtained by the proceeds of a sale of a homestead, but averred that it was the property of the petitioner, and was his property at the time of the execution and delivery of the mortgage ; but alleged that if the proceeds of any homestead were invested in this property, it had no notice or knowledge of any such fact at the time, and that it in good faith and for value accepted the notes of C. E. and C. T. Walden, and the mortgage given to secure them. The defendant further answered that, before the execution of the mortgage, it held a note signed by C. E. and C. T. Walden, payable to Guthrie, for $750, and that at the time of the maturity of the same it was not [300]*300paid, and the defendant entered suit on the same. Thereupon the Waldens proposed that, if defendant would advance them $500 in money and goods for the purpose of operating their turpentine business, they would secure defendant with the property mentioned in the mortgage. This proposition was accepted, and thereupon the makers of the notes executed a mortgage on the property described, which includes the house and lot in the City of Waycross, to secure their notes, aggregating the sum.of $1,200. Before the notes and mortgage were executed, the president of the defendant company asked both C. E. and C. T. Walden if there was any encumbrance on the property sought to be mortgaged, and both stated to him there was not. They also stated that there was no homestead against the property. Defendant acted in good faith throughout the transaction, and took the notes and mortgage bona fide and for value, without any knowledge that any of such property was impressed with the homestead, or proceeds of the homestead.

At the hearing it was shown that in April, 1899, A. L. Johnson, in consideration of $500, conveyed to Charles E. Walden the house and lot in the city of Waycross on the corner of Isabella and Remshart streets. The petitioner, after testifying that he was the head of a family, and that the house and lot had been purchased by the proceeds of the homestead which had been set apart to him, further said that before the execution of the mortgage he told Mr. A. P. Brantley, the chief officer of the defendant company, that while there was no mortgage or lien against the property, yet he had obtained a homestead for his family several years ago, and that the proceeds of that homestead was his Waycross home, on which he was about to execute this lien. He further said that when the original homestead property was sold and reinvested in a home on Albany avenue, he did not obtain from the owner any deed to that place, up to the time he made an exchange of the property on Albany avenue for the property, on Remshart street, and when he exchanged the property on Albany avenue for bis present home he had the original owner to execute titles to the same to A. L. Johnson, and that Johnson in turn executed to plaintiff title to the property on Isabella and Remshart streets. C. T. Walden also testified that, before tbe mortgage to the Brantley Company was executed, he had heard his brother, the petitioner, tell A. P. Brantley, of the Brantley Company, that the property he [301]*301was mortgaging was the proceeds of an alleged homestead set apart for the use of his family some years ago. Defendant introduced its mortgage, and the evidence of two witnesses who testified, in substance, to the facts set up in its answer, and, among other facts, that the makers of the mortgage came to an agent of the company and proposed to adjust their indebtedness by a mortgage on the property in Waycross; that this was accepted, and the notes and mortgage then executed; and that on inquiry each of the mortgagors said there was no homestead or exemption on the property. At the conclusion • of the evidence, the judge refused to grant the injunction as prayed for, and revoked the temporary restraining order, to which Walden excepted.

1. The only question which arises in this case is, whether the trial judge erred in refusing to grant the injunction. It is not contested that at the time of the execution of the mortgage C. E. Walden held a deed to the lot which he had mortgaged, and that Johnson, the previous owner, had executed title to him individually. It has been repeatedly ruled by this court that property purchased with the proceeds of a homestead is as much exempt from levy and sale as the original property set apart as a homestead would be. In the case of Johnson v. Redwine, 105 Ga. 449, it was also ruled that one who takes a mortgage upon land purchased with the proceeds of exempted property, and who knows, or is chargeable with notice, that such was the fact, acquires his lien subject to the exemption rights.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 503, 116 Ga. 298, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walden-v-brantley-co-ga-1902.