215 Ga. 631 | Ga. | 1960
Allied Finance Company, a corporation, brought its petition against Jesse Bell, Rebecca Bell, and Albany Loan Service, which, as amended, alleges that on F'ebuary 13, 1956, it obtained a judgment against Jesse Bell based upon a homestead waiver note, upon which execution was duly issued and recorded, and upon which there is due plaintiff $1,115.61; that in June, 1956, Jesse Bell and Rebecca- Bell jointly purchased a described house and lot, and jointly executed a security deed thereon to Mid-State Investment Corporation for $2,224.32; and that, at the time of the filing
To the petition defendants Jesse Bell and Rebecca Bell filed separate, but identical, general demurrers upon the grounds: (1) The petition does not set forth any cause of action at law or in equity against this defendant; (2) that to grant the relief prayed for would injure and irreparably damage the rights of Mid-State Investment Corporation; (3) that the plaintiff failed to avail itself of the rights available to it in the bankruptcy proceeding; (4) that the petition fails to show that the homestead set apart to Jesse Bell is worth anything over and above the amounts owed thereon to Mid-State Investment Corporation and Albany Loan Service; and (5) because Mid-State Investment Corporation is not a party to the case. To the judgment overruling these demurrers the defendants Jesse Bell and Rebecca Bell except. Held:
1. The grantor in a deed to land executed to secure a debt, under the provisions of Code § 67-1301, retains the right of redemption by payment of the debt, and consequently an equitable estate in the land which may be subjected to the payment of his debts. Citizens Bank of Moultrie v. Taylor, 155 Ga. 416 (117 S. E. 247). See, also Kidd v. Kidd, 158 Ga. 546 (124 S. E. 45, 36 A. L. R. 798).
2. The right to a homestead exemption, except as to certain
3. In the case where a creditor obtains a judgment based on a homestead waiver note, and execution is issued thereon and recorded on the proper execution docket prior to the institution of bankruptcy proceedings by the debtor, and where the bankruptcy court simply sets aside property or an interest therein as a homestead exemption and the judgment is not proved in bankruptcy, and the judgment creditor does not participate in any division of the assets of the bankrupt, the bankruptcy court has nothing further to do with such property, and the holder of the execution may subject it to' the satisfaction of his judgment lien. Lyle v. Roswell Store, Inc., 187 Ga. 386 (1b), supra; McKenney v. Cheney, 118 Ga. 387 (45 S. E. 433).
4. While ordinarily the holder of a junior judgment against the grantor in a security deed cannot enforce his lien against the interest of the grantor in the land conveyed without redemption by first paying in full the secured debt (Code § 39-201; Kidd v. Kidd, 158 Ga. 546, 552, supra; Dwyer v. Jones, 201 Ga. 259, 39 S. E. 2d 313), where, as here, the equitable petition of the junior judgment creditor shows that the defendant in execution owned only a one-half undivided interest in the property conveyed by the security deed executed by such debtor and the other defendant as joint owners to secure the joint debt of the makers; that the plaintiff judgment creditor has no lien against the undivided interest of such joint owner; that the equitable estate or interest of the defendant in execution in the land covered by the security deed was set aside to the defendant in execution as a homestead exemption in a voluntary bankruptcy proceeding filed by the defendant in execution; that, subsequently to the setting aside of such homestead, he and his co-owner executed the second loan deed subject to the first covering the saíne land to still another párty to secure a debt of the joint owners, which
5. Since the petition does not attack, but admits the validity and superiority of the security deed held by Mid-State Investment Corporation as to the balance due on the indebtedness secured thereby, and does not seek to affect the rights of the holder thereof, the petition was not demurrable at the instance of the plaintiffs in error on the ground that the grantee in the security deed was not made a party defendant. Shepherd v. Armour Fertilizer Works, 138 Ga. 555 (75 S. E. 585); Dwyer v. Jones, 201 Ga. 259 (39 S. E. 2d 313).
6. Under the foregoing rulings, the petition stated a cause of action, and the trial judge did not err in overruling the general demurrers thereto.
Judgment affirmed.