93 Ga. 540 | Ga. | 1894
Joseph Dunagan died in 1861, and in the same year J. T. and Ezekiel Dunagan qualified as administrators of his estate. In 1887 certain money which had been buried by the deceased was found and went into the hands of the administrators. They were cited by the heirs to a settlement before the ordinary, and a judgment was rendered against them in favor of the heirs.
Where one qualifies as administrator, it is an undertaking equivalent to a contract on his part to duly administer the estate according to law for the benefit of heirs and creditors. In the present case the claim of the creditor was based upon this contract on the part of the administrator; and the contract, as we have seen, antedated the constitution of 1868, under which the homestead was set apart. The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Gunn v. Barry, 15 Wall. 610, reversing the decision of this court, held that the homestead right could not prevail against a contract created prior to the constitution — that as to such con-. tracts the homestead is a nullity; and that ruling has since been followed in several decisions, of this court. It has also been held that, as between the homestead right and the claim of a creditor founded upon such a contract, the date of the contract and not of the breach of it governs in determining the question of priority. VanDyke v. Kilgo, 54 Ga. 551; Drinkwater v. Moreman, 61 Ga. 395; Hunt v. Juhan, 63 Ga. 162; Douglass v. Boylston, 69 Ga. 186; Willis v. Thornton, 73 Ga. 128. It follows that the-court below did not err in holding the property subject. Judgment affirmed.