25 S.E.2d 413 | Ga. | 1943
1. The Code, § 51-1504, expressly extends to "intestate insolvent estates" the benefit of the statutory homestead and exemption which is given by §§ 51-1301 et seq., "in all cases where there is living a widow or child of the intestate."
2. Where the widow of an insolvent intestate thus proceeds to obtain an exemption of personal property, there is no necessity to resort to equity to prevent the property from being seized and sold by a creditor of the intestate, pending the filing and record of her schedule, or after such filing and record. Mapp v. Long,
3. The act approved February 15, 1876 (Ga. L. 1876, p. 51), on which the widow here relies as giving equity jurisdiction of her suit to recover possession of alleged exempt personal property from a creditor of the decedent husband, and to enjoin the creditor from changing the status of the property, is manifestly without application. This act by its title and terms was limited to suits for the recovery of property which "has been set a part" as a homestead and sold before its passage; and, as was held in Whitworth v. Wofford,
4. The widow's petition did not disclose the particular terms of the instrument which the decedent executed to the defendant creditor, but merely alleged that the seizure was unlawful for the reason that the debt had not matured. If the instrument executed by the decedent conveyed title to secure a debt, the subsequent exemption would avail nothing against such a creditor; and no proceeding in equity could strengthen the widow's claim against the creditor. Mozley v. Fontana,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justicesconcur.