12 Ga. App. 522 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
Summons of garnishment was served upon Clifton. He answered that he had certain described property of the de
The statute allows a debtor to take either the constitutional or “long” homestead, or the statutory or “short” homestead, but expressly prohibits the taking of both. The statutory homestead is provided for in the Civil Code, §. 3416, and the constitutional homestead in § 3377 et seq. Section 3404 provides: “Nothing contained in this Article shall be construed to prevent any debtor, who does not wish to avail himself of the benefits of this Article, from claiming the exemptions allowed by section 3416. But no person who shall be allowed the exemptions under said section shall take any benefit under this Article. Nor shall any person who shall be allowed the exemptions under the law contained in this Article be' allowed the exemptions under said section 3416, unless the homestead and exempted property so elected is lost by virtue of a sale under an outstanding claim, in which event such election shall not bar an application for a homestead and exemption not liable to such outstanding claim.” The language of. this statute is mandatory. No person who has been allowed the exemption under section 3416 shall be allowed the benefit of the constitutional homestead provided for in section 3377 et seq. Nor can any person who has been allowed the constitutional homestead take the exemption provided for in section 3416, unless the property exempted is lost by virtue of a sale under a process superior to the homestead. Doubtless this exception in the statute would apply without regard to which homestead is taken first, but it is the only exception in the statute. The decisions of the Supreme Court holding that where the homestead first taken is void for any reason, the other may be applied for, do not conflict with what is now ruled, because in those cases no homestead was ever in fact allowed before the second application was made. A void homestead is no homestead. Nor does the decision in Hawks v. Hawks, 64 Ga. 241, conflict with anything now ruled. That was a case where the property set apart under the constitutional homestead was subject to be sold under a purchase-money claim. The court held that in such a case the debtor had the right to abandon his constitutional homestead and take the statutory exemption. The homestead being set apart to the applicant for the benefit of the family then in existence, if that