39 Ga. 466 | Ga. | 1869
Lead Opinion
The facts in this case are, that in the year 1859, one Harrison had a judgment against Kelly, who was the owner of a tract of land in Hart county. Harrison was about to levy his execution on Kelly’s land in satisfaction of his judgment, when Kelly, the defendant in fi. fa., borrowed of Thomas W. Thomas the money to pay off said execution in satisfaction of the judgment, and executed his note to Thomas, as well as a mortgage upon the land, to secure the payment thereof. Subsequently Thomas W. Thomas assigned the note and mortgage to James Thomas, the plaintiff’s testator, who foreclosed the mortgage, and levied the mortgage fi. fa. on the land to satisfy the same. Kelly had a homestead laid off on the land, as provided by the Constitution of 1868, and the Act of the Legislature enacted to carry into effect that provision of the Constitution, and claimed that his land was exempt from sale under the provisions of the Plomestead Act. On the trial of the case in the Court below, the Court charged the jury, “that the Constitution of 1868, and the Homestead Act passed under it, could not withdraw said land from the lien of such pre-existing mortgage.” This charge of the Court is assigned as error.
This Court is unanimous in its judgment affirming the
I am aware that a majority of this Court, in the case of Chambliss vs. Phelps, decided during the present term, held, that the Court had no jurisdiction to enforce an execution issued upon a judgment to foreclose a mortgage made before the adoption of the Constitution of 1868, against the homestead claimed by Chambliss. Having dissented from the judgment of the Court in that case, I have not been able to perceive any difference in principle, between Phelps’ legal right to enforce his mortgage against Chambliss’ homestead, and the plaintiff’s legal right to enforce his mortgage against Kelly’s homestead, in this case. Both mortgages were executed prior to the adoption of the Constititution of 1868, and both were incumbrances on the land claimed as a homstead. As I understand the ruling of the majority of the Court in the case of Chambliss vs. Phelps, if Harrison had retained his judgment lien in full force upon Kelly’s land up to this time, he could not have enforced it against Kelly’s homestead, and if Harrison could not now enforce his judgment lien against Kelly’s homestead, if he had continued to hold it, in what better condition is Thomas W. Thomas, and those claiming under him, than Harrison would have been ? Kelly borrowed the money from Thomas, paid off Harrison’s judgment, gave his note for the money, and executed a mortgage on the land to Thomas. Thomas, and those claiming under him, certainly have no higher or stronger legal or equitable claim to enforce their lien or incumbrance than Harrison, to whose rights they were subrogated. In fact, the incumbrance taken by Thomas on Kelly’s land was inferior in dignity to that held by Harrison on his land, and yet the majority of the Court held, that Harrison could not have enforced his incumbrance against the homestead, nor can Phelps enforce his incumbrance against the homestead, but that the plaintiffs in this case oan enforce their mortgage incumbrance against Kelly’s homestead; which ruling, in my judgment, is right, but I cannot see any difference in principle between Phelps and Chambliss, and this ease. Both were incumbrances
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring, wrote no opinion. His reason propounded from the bench was as follows: “ An execution founded on a debt contracted for the purpose of paying a judgment about to sell the land, is within the exceptions to the constitutional provision securing to the family of a debtor, a homestead; it is an execution founded on a debt contracted for the removal of an incumbrance, and comes within the express exception of this Act.”
Concurrence Opinion
concurred as follows :
1. The first section of the seventh article of the new Constitution of this State is retroactive as well as prospective, and denies jurisdiction to the Courts to enforce any j udgment, decree or execution heretofore or hereafter rendered against the homestead, except as therein excepted.
2. The exceptions are also retroactive as well as prospective, and the Courts have jurisdiction to enforce a judgment rendered upon a debt contracted prior to the adoption of the Constitution, for money lent to remove an incumbrance from the land now claimed as a homestead.