After rendering a decision in this case, by which the judgment of the trial court was affirmed, a motion for a rehearing was filed by the plaintiff in error, the Chero-Cola Company. The rehearing was granted, and the case again taken up for consideration. Eealizing that the principle involved was one of importance, the court gave to the controlling question presented by the record careful consideration; and after further consideration the court has reached a different conclusion from that announced in the majority opinion as at first filed, and we are now of the opinion that the sounder view is stated in the dissenting opinion written by Mr. Justice Gilbert and concurred in by Mr. Justice Atkinson, and the former opinion, in which were presented the views of the majority, has been withdrawn and the dissenting opinion, with a few verbal changes, is substituted therefor as follows:
In this record is involved the question of whether a judgment for permanent alimony, paj^able in stated monthly installments, creates an enforceable lien against the property of the husband which he then owns or may afterwards acquire, having a priority over liens which the husband may subsequently create in favor of other creditors. The importance of the question is manifest. It involves the question of the free alienation of all or any of one’s property, possibly for the remainder of Ms life, after the rendition of a judgment awarding permanent alimony. In this case such judgment is not for a gross sum, but for monthly payments so long as the
*274
wife may live or remain unmarried
(Fisher
v. Fisher, 164
Ga.
81,
In
Landis
v. Sanner, 146
Ga.
606 (
From a careful reading of the sections of the Code above quoted and the opinion in the
Landis
case, it seems clear that the provision for scheduling of property in a suit for divorce and alimony is for the purpose of placing on record a description of the precise property affected by the suit, and such notice is a warning to all persons not to purchase property so scheduled. Also it brings to the court and jury definite specified property out of which the libellant seeks to have a support set aside. The property not so scheduled is not affected. And a conveyance made by the husband of such unscheduled property after a separation between his wife and himself, and while a divorce action is pending, is not affected. Even
*276
when scheduled, if not set apart, the title to the property is not affected by the alimony judgment.
Russell
v.
Rice, 103 Ga.
310 (30 S. E.
37); Couller
v.
Lumpkin,
94
Ga.
225 (
“In Georgia a judgment lien attaches to all property acquired by the defendant in the future, and such a doctrine would put Westmoreland not only where he could not sell this realty but could not engage in any form of trading or manufacture, because he could not pass good title to that which he came to own. Nor could he relieve himself by paying off the hindering lien. Such a situation would be contrary to the general policy of the law, and to avoid it a strained construction has been given to the Georgia statute preventing an alienation pending the divorce.
Singleton
v. Close, 130
Ga.
716, 720,
Judgment reversed.
