101 Ga. 152 | Ga. | 1897
The official report states, in substance, the pleadings and the evidence. It will there be seen that Evans filed his equitable petition against Mrs. Courson, her husband John M. Courson, her father W. L. Coleman, and others mentioned therein, to set aside certain mortgages executed by Mrs. Courson to her father and to others, upon the ground that they were given for the purpose of delaying or defrauding her creditors. He also, in the same petition, claimed damages against Coleman and John M. Courson for recording the mortgages alleged to be fraudulent, and for giving notice thereof at a sale of the mortgaged property, held under an execution against Mrs. Courson in favor of Sibley, Nixon & Co., which notice prevented the property’s bringing its full value at the sale. Evans claimed in his petition that the mortgages being fraudulent and void, notice of them given at the sale prevented others from bidding and enabled Coleman,
Under the facts as disclosed by the record, the court should have charged the jury as requested. If the jury believed that Mrs. Courson executed this mortgage to her father, Mr. Coleman, and sent it to the clerk for registration, that it was recorded, and that Coleman knew nothing of the mortgage until after its record, then any judgment obtained against Mrs. Courson by another creditor after the record of the mortgage but before its acceptance by Coleman had a lien against her property prior to the lien of the mortgage. Ratification generally relates back to the act ratified. So if a bona fide mortgage is executed without the knowledge of the mortgagee who, however, subsequently ratifies it, this ratification generally relates back to the execution of the mortgage; but if,