149 Ga. 654 | Ga. | 1920
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The controlling question in this case is, whether the evidence authorized the judge to hold that the plaintiff in fi. fa., or her husband, who was her general agent and acted for her in the transaction, had constructive notice, when the defendant in fi. fa. executed to him the security deed, that the land therein conveyed was a part of the land which had been previously exempted to the defendant ás the head of a family under the “statutory or short homestead” as provided for in sections 2366 et seq., of the Code of 1895 (Civil Code of 1910, § 3416).’
The exemption here involved was made in 1906, and is therefore covered by the provisions of the Code of 1895. Section 2867 of that Code declared that every debtor seeking the benefit of the exemption “shall make out a schedule of the property claimed to be exempt, and return the same to the ordinary of the county, without making any application for homestead, and it shall not be necessary to publish the same in a gazette. The ordinary shall record the schedule in a book to be kept by him for that purpose,”
In 74 Ga., supra, it appeared that: “On November 24, 1881, McDaniel filed and had recorded an exemption of personalty, under section 2040 of the Code, including $65.00 worth of provisions, consisting of sixty-five bushels of corn in the shuck, and one thousand pounds of fodder. The petition or -statement accompanying the schedule stated that the applicant was a head of a family, consisting of himself, wife and children, whose names and ages were given, and that he claimed the property set out .as an exemption.” When offered in evidence the schedule of property sought to be exempted from levy and sale was objected to on the ground that it did not appeaj “from the paper that the applicant was a debtor, or from whose estate the property was taken.” It was held by this court that the objections were-not good, and that the paper was admissible in evidence. It does not appear that the schedule was objected to on the ground of the insufficiency of identification of the corn. The action, however, was trover for the corn, brought by McDaniel suing for the use of his wife, and a recovery by him was sustained.
It has been held in several cases that the provisions of section 2868 of the Code of 1895, relating to having the land sought to be exempted surveyed and platted by the county surveyor, do not apply where the quantity of land owned by the applicant for exemption is less than the number of acres allowed as an exemption under the statute. Rogers v. Hawkins, 20 Ga. 200; Pritchard
The cases relating to the insufficiency of description of land in levies and deeds, and where year’s support is set aside in land, dower, and also where land is set apart as exempt as a constitutional homestead, are clearly unlike the present case, for there are statutes requiring the identity of the land in all such cases. We may remark that the same was true with reference to the “statutory or short homestead” under sections 2, 3, and 14 of the act approved October 3, 1868 (Acts 1868, p. 27). That act, however, was amended by the act approved October 27, 1870 (Acts 1870, p. 74), wherein it was provided that “all that shall be required to enable a debtor to avail himself of the benefit of said law [as to statutory homestead] is to make out a schedule of the property claimed to be exempt, and return the same to the ordinary of the county, without making any application for homestead, and it shall not be necessary to publish the same in a gazette.” This provision of the act of 1870 is embodied in the section of the Code of 1895 hereinabove referred to.
Judgment affirmed.