142 Ga. 615 | Ga. | 1914
The Court of Appeals has certified the following questions for our decision: “Where a judgment against joint defendants was rendered outside the county in which two of them resided, and ten days later, in the county in which the judgment was rendered, personal property of these two was sold by them to a creditor, who took it in satisfaction of a pre-existing debt and without notice of the judgment, and subsequently, in the same county and in less than thirty days from the date of the judgment, an execution based on it, which had never been recorded, was levied on this property, was the purchasing creditor protected from the lien of the judgment? Instruction is desired as to the application of section. 3321 or section 3322 of the Civil Code to these facts. Is this case thereby rendered an exception to the general rule stated in section 5946, to the effect that all judgments obtained in this State shall bind all property of the defendant from the date of the judgment, ‘except as otherwise provided in this code’ ?”
On the trial of the case in the court below, it was submitted to the presiding judge for adjudication without the intervention of a jury. Judge Gilbert rendered the following judgment: “Personal property of Waters Brothers was levied on in Taylor county, under an execution issued on a judgment obtained in Taylor county. Waters Brothers were residents of Randolph county. The execution has never been recorded. The property was bought by Reynolds Banking Company, in Taylor county, taking the same on a preexisting debt, ten days after judgment obtained and without notice of same. When levy was made, Reynolds Banking Company filed a claim, and the issue is between the lien of the execution and the
We think the foregoing opinion of the learned circuit judge correctly and concisely interprets the sections of the code applicable to this case, and that his opinion is a correct statement of the law. The legislature in providing for the record of liens failed to provide for cases of personal property in counties other than that of the residence of the defendant. It made no provision for a case where the personal property had been taken into counties other than that of the defendant’s residence; and the reason probably was that it was impracticable to record the liens in every county into which a transient person might take his personal property. In the case of real estate, the provision is different. There the property is permanently located, and one desiring to purchase it may look to the county of its location to see if there are liens recorded against it. If there are none, a bona fide purchaser without notice is protected. But there was evidently an intentional “casus omissus” as to personal property, except as provided in sections 3321 and 3322 of the Civil Code. But the instant case does not fall within the application of either of those sections, and is not “thereby rendered an exception