114 Ga. 643 | Ga. | 1902
Certain personal property, to wit, a horse, ten mules, wagons, harness, etc., was, on December 8, 1900, levied on by the sheriff of Pulaski county, as the property of G. R. Allison, to satisfy an execution in favor of Fulghum, administrator. J. P. Williams Company filed a claim to the property, and, issue having
The claimant rested his title to the property on his purchase at the sale under the power contained in the mortgage; and the naked question is presented, whether under such a sale and purchase the claimant derived a valid title to the property. We think not. While freely admitting that under the proper exercise of a power of sale given in a mortgage, the title of the mortgagor is divested, and passes into the purchaser, there is one reason why the sale in the present instance did not have this effect under the circumstances which are shown to have existed at the time it took place. The effect of the mortgage was simply to create a lien on the property mentioned therein, in favor -of the claimants, to secure the payment of their debt. It conveyed no title. Under an ordinary mortgage a valid sale of the mortgaged property could only have been had by a foreclosure in the methods pointed out by law, and a sale under the levy of the execution issued thereon. The power given by the mortgagor to the mortgagee to sell the property mortgaged, in case of default by the latter, is but a substitution by agreement of such method in lieu of the ordinary sale under foreclosure (Mutual Loan Co. v. Haas, 100 Ga. 111), and we can not imagine how a sale had under a power given in the mortgage is entitled to any more consideration or has attached to it incidents of a higher dignity than those which attach to a sale under foreclosure. As to the relative rights of third persons, we think they stand on the same footing. The evidence does not show that at the time the sale under the power took place the property had been delivered to the mortgagee. On the contrary, it shows that at the time of such sale the mortgagee was not in possession of the property, but that the same was in the possession of the sheriff who seized it under the levy made under plaintiff’s execution. This court has more than once ruled that it was necessary for the full execution of the power of sale contained in a mortgage that the mortgaged (personal) property should be in the possession of the mortgagee so that he may fully effectuate the purposes of the sale by delivering possession to the purchaser. Here the property at the time of the attempted sale was in the possession of an officer of the court who had seized it to satisfy by execution sale a valid
Judgment reversed.