84 N.C. 590 | N.C. | 1881
The present application is made by Simpson to set aside *592 the execution (and a similar motion is made in regard to the others) under which the land has been sold, and he appeals from the refusal of the court to grant it.
The debt being fiduciary was not discharged by the proceedings in the bankrupt court, notwithstanding the filing of proof therein in order to a participation in the distribution of his estate, and the plaintiffs were at liberty to sue out and enforce execution against the property of the debtors as before. Simpson v. Simpson,
If it were liable, this was the appropriate means by which the property can be made available to the creditor, and he should not be denied the process by which it is to be thus applied. Whether this exemption has been lost by the successive transfers through which the title has passed and the judgment lien overreaches that vested in the wife, are questions not to be disposed of upon motion and affidavit, but they should be tested in an action between the contesting *593 claimants. We are not called upon, and do not undertake, to express an opinion as to the merits of such a controversy, but leave its solution to another and different proceeding which may hereafter be instituted.
We therefore uphold the ruling of the court and affirm the judgment.
No error. Affirmed.