109 Ga. 220 | Ga. | 1899
N. H. Gammage gave to the Bank of Forsyth a mortgage on certain realty and personalty to secure a loan of money, and in it waived all right to homestead and exemption. The bank foreclosed this mortgage on the personalty therein described, by making the usual affidavit as required by statute, upon which a mortgage fi. fa. issued, and was duly levied upon a horse and mule embraced in the mortgage. To this action no defense by affidavit of illegality or otherwise was made by the defendant, who had full knowledge of the proceeding. Pending the levy the defendant, as the head of a family consisting of his wife and minor children, applied for a homestead and exemption in his property, including that embraced in the levy of the mortgage fi. fa. The application was pending at the time of the sale, and it was announced at the sale that whoever purchased would buy subject to the homestead. Nothing was said indicating any defense to the foreclosure, or any
Were the rule otherwise, then we would be met with an anomaly in the law which prescribes the particular method for the enforcement of a certain legal right, but which can never become final between the parties, unless the defendant, at his own option or discretion, sees proper to file a defense, and thus raise an issue for adjudication. Such a rule, in the sales of personal property under mortgage foreclosure, wmuld certainly work great, wrong to purchasers at public sales; for a title that a purchaser would thus acquire would always be open, within the period of statutory limitation, to an attack by the mortgagor upon any ground of which he may have availed himself in resisting the proceedings to enforce the payment of his debt. In the case of Smith v. Green, 34 Ga. 180, Lyon, J., in his opinion, treats a distress warrant as “final process of itself, under which the property of the tenant may be levied and sold to satisfaction ‘as in cases of other executions’; unless the tenant shall make oath that ‘ the sum, or some part thereof distrained for, is not due.’ ” See also Rountree v. Rutherford, 65 Ga. 444-8. The same rule has been applied by the court to a foreclosure of a mortgage upon personalty. Dawson v. Garland, 70 Ga. 447; Hart v. Hatcher, 71 Ga. 717. In the opinion in the case last cited the court analogizes the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage to a distress warrant, and quotes and approves the language used in the case of Rountree v. Rutherford, 65 Ga. 444, above cited. Again, in the Rountree case, Justice Jackson, in treating the subject as to when such mesne process becomes final, after advancing the idea that it is only mesne when the counter-affidavit is filed, says, “ It is true that if the counter-affidavit had not been taken, the property would have
Testimony was introduced upon the trial pro and con- upon the subject of usury, but, in the above view taken of this case, it is unnecessary to consider the question as to whether or not there was any evidence showing usury in the debt.
Judgment reversed.