187 Ga. 386 | Ga. | 1938
1. “The right to a homestead or exemption” is an interest which in good faith “can be transferred and assigned before the assignor is adjudged a bankrupt.” Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Pendergrass Banking Co., 164 Ga. 302 (4) (138 S. E. 223); Strickland Hardware Co. v. Fletcher, 152 Ga. 445 (110 S. E. 229); Saul v. Bowers, 155 Ga. 450, 453 (117 S.
(a) Such a transfer or assignment may be accomplished by a provision in a promissory note.
(5) When the property is set apart as exempt, the court of bankruptcy exhausts its jurisdiction over the property, and it remains the property of the bankrupt, unaffected by the bankruptcy proceedings. Bell v. Dawson Grocery Co., 120 Ga. 628 (48 S. E. 150); Saul v. Bowers, supra. Accordingly, his assignment thereof, whether before he is adjudged a bankrupt (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Hirsch, supra) or pending the bankruptcy proceedings, will be unaffected by such proceedings. Taylor v. Williams, 139 Ga. 581 (77 S. E. 386).
2. Where a creditor holds a note containing a waiver of homestead exemption and assignment of property that might be set apart to the bankrupt under his claim of exemption under the homestead laws of the State, equity may afford him a remedy by injunction to prevent the bankrupt from receiving property that may be set apart on his claim of homestead exemption, and appointment of a receiver to apply to the court of bankruptcy for possession of the property to be administered by the court of equity, as necessary to collection of the debt. An equitable proceeding of the character mentioned, instituted after filing of the petition in bankruptcy and before the property is set apart, is not premature on the ground that it is an unauthorized interference with the jurisdiction of the court of bankruptcy.
3. If at the interlocutory hearing of the petition for injunction and receiver and the intervention of Eobinson, which had been allowed, the plaintiff in the original petition (Eoswell Store Inc.) announced to the court that it “had made settlement with the defendant, and it would offer no evidence, . . and desired the court to dismiss the original bill with costs against the plaintiff,” and thereupon the court stated that he “would hear from the other parties at interest, and would reserve its opinion until a later day,” it was not erroneous, in subsequently passing on the case, to overrule the motion to dismiss the original petition on which the intervention was predicated.
4. The property set apart by the court of bankruptcy on the claim of homestead exemption was: “Equity in the undivided real
5. On application of the principles stated in -the first and second paragraphs, the judge did not, for any reason assigned and argued in the brief of the attorney for the plaintiff in error, err in overruling the--general demurrers to the petition and to the petition for
Judgment affirmed.