148 Ga. 380 | Ga. | 1918
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. In this State mortgages and attachments are liens on specific property from their dates (Civil Code, §§ 3256, 5124), and general judgments are liens from their dates on all property of the defendant. (Civil Code, § 5946.) A discharge in bankruptcy under section 17 (a) of the bankruptcy act of 1898 as amended, with specified exceptions, operates upon all provable debts as defined in section 63 (a) of the act. Included among provable debts as there defined is “a fixed liability as evidenced by a judgment or other instrument in writing absolutely owing at the time of the filing of the petition.” In an attachment case arising since the act of 1898 it was held, in Evans v. Rounsaville, 115 Ga. 684 (42 S. E. 100), that discharge in bankruptcy terminated all personal liability, but did not affect the lien which had attached to the property before the petition in bankrutcy was filed. Similar rulings have been made with reference to the liens of general judgments obtained since the passage' of the bankruptcy act of 1898, supra: Smith v. Zachry, 115 Ga. 722 (42 S. E. 102); Philmon v. Marshall, 116 Ga. 811 (43 S. E. 48); McKenney v. Cheney, 118 Ga. 387 (5), 396 (45 S. E. 433); Camp v. Young, 119 Ga. 981 (47 S. E. 560); Kener v. LaGrange Mills, 135 Ga. 730 (70 S. E. 245). And in other cases under the act of 1867: Dozier v. McWhorter, 113 Ga. 584 (39 S. E. 106); Bush v. Lester, 55 Ga. 579, and citations. The case of Camp v. Young, supra, involved the lien of a mortgage and also the lien of a general judgment, and the ruling extended to both. In the several cases'mentioned the character of the lien was not regarded as important. It was deemed sufficient that the lien was valid and subsisting. See also Love-land on Bankruptcy, § 427. A discharge of personal liability under section 17(a) of the bankruptcy act of 1898 arises by force of the statute; not from any act of the creditor. A discharge of a lien
2. It is contended that if the liens were not extinguished as against the property set apart as exempt, they were lost on account of the sale of the land, and could not be enforced against the proceeds of sale. The reply is that the bankrupt applied for a statutory exemption of money from his general estate. A court of bankruptcy, having jurisdiction to set apart the money claimed as exempt, could order a sale of .the land from which the money was to be derived, unincumbered, and direct that the liens attach to the proceeds of sale. Sheldon v. Round, 40 Mich. 425; Black on
Judgment reversed.