75 Ga. 774 | Ga. | 1885
The record raises for adjudication the following questions :
(1.) Whether the land exempted under section 2040 of the Code vests in the children of the debtor the title to the same after his death, and relieves it from the lien created by a mortgage executed before the exemption was allowed.
(2.) Whether the land thus exempted, after the execution of the mortgage, can be said to have a lien created thereon, or to be encumbered or conveyed contrary to the provisions of laws inhibiting the party to whom the exemption is allowed from alienating or encumbering it, unless it be sold by the debtor an'd his wife, if any, jointly, with the consent of the ordinary, and the proceeds shall go to the use of the debtor’s family.
(3.) Whether the plaintiff is concluded by a decree in chancery, made upon a suit between these parties respecting the exemption in question, and the enforcement of the lien created by the mortgage executed by the debter to the plaintiff and on which an execution issuing upon the
1. The question made by the first assignment of error was passed upon by us in Gresham vs. Johnson et al., 70 Ga., 631, in which we held that an exemption made to a party, for the use of himself and a minor son, under section 2040 of the Code of 1873, did not alter or change or in any manner affect the debtor’s title to the property so exempted, but devoted it to a special use, and to that extent imposed a charge or encumbrance upon the estate, and when the family was broken up, either by the death of its dependent members, or by the sons attaining their majority, in case they are otherwise sui juris, or the marriage of the daughters, or death of the wife, the property became thereby disencumbered and was liable to the debts of the owner of the legal title; that the use was then fully executed and was at an end.
It is now insisted that in rendering this judgment, the act of the 18th of March, 1866, was overlooked by this court and that the act confers upon the family of the debtor the title to the property exempted, and after his death it passed to them in fee simple. If this be a correct construction of that act, then this decision repeals it, for the case was as much within its provisions as that now under consideration. But neither the able and experienced judge of the superior court (Pottle), who determined it, nor the learned and accurate counsel, who argued it both in that court and in this, held that view of the statute, now insisted on, so far as we know, for the first time. The Code of 1863, Pt. 2, Tit. 3, Ch. 2, Art. 4 and Section 3, together with this act, contains the law regulating the rights of these parties. By its provisions, the property exempted is for the use and benefit of the debtor’s family. After it is set apart, no lien can be created thereon, except in the manner therein specified; it is not subject to levy and sale by virtue of any process. If the husband refuses, the wife or any next friend for her
The object of such legislation is to provide for those to whom the parent owed a support, and we held, under a statute enacted for a similar purpose, which gives to the widow an action to recover damages for the homicide of her husband, or where there was no widow but children, then to the children, that it did not include such children as were adults at the death of the parent. Mott vs. The Central Railroad and Banking Company,70 Ga., 680. That statute, in its terms, made no distinction between adult and minor children, but looking to its object, we concluded that we could only carry into effect the intention of the legislature by conferring the right of action on the minor children, and by distributing among them, where there was no widow, the amount of the recovery. We are well satisfied with the conclusion reached both in this and in the other case cited. It follows from these decisions that there was no error in the ruling of the court upon this question.
2. We are unable to agree with the learned counsel for plaintiff in error, that a lien created by a mortgage prior to setting apart as an exemption to the debtor a portion of the property covered by the mortgage is such an incumbrance as he cannot make upon the property, except in accordance with the provision of law and in the manner therein specified. The very terms employed are directly opposed to the idea; there was nothing to prevent him from alienating the property before it was incumbered with the use created by the exemption, and if he could have conveyed it absolutely, why could he not have sold it conditionally ? The exemption could not prevent the foreclosure of the mortgage upon the property set apart, after the execution of the mortgage for the use of the debtor’s family; but that it could not be seized and sold by the execution issuing from the judgment of foreclosure is true. This, however, did not destroy the process; it suspended its operation as to this particular property only so
3. The decree insisted upon as conclusive and binding on the parties to this suit is not before us for review, and whether it is sustained by the law is immaterial, as we are at liberty to determine its effect only in its relátion to the questions involved in this litigation; if it adjudicates and finally passes upon them, then it is conclusive on the rights now in controversy. But a careful examination of the record in that case leads to the conclusion that it settles none of the material points made by the issues now determined ; it decrees to the complainants, who were members of the family of George Willis in his lifetime, the fifty acres of land to the extent that it was set apart to him as an exemption in his lifetime, and enjoins fhe defendants “ from interfering with the possession of said fifty acres of land so set apart as an exemption,” under and by virtue of any right or title acquired by them by reason of the sheriff’s sale under the mortgage fi. fa., as set out in complainant’s bill, at which he became the purchaser. The mortgage judgment and execution were decreed to be valid, as was likewise the sale of the remainder of the premises under the same, and the defendant’s title thereto was confirmed. It will be seen that this decree does not touch the question of the party in whom the title to the property vests upon the termination of the use for which it was exempted, nor does it restrain the execution of the process when the incumbrance created by the exemption is removed. The material points in litigation between these parties were not thereby adjudicated, and so they cannotin any wise be considered res adjudioata. The record discloses no error, and leaves us no alternative but to order the judgment affirmed.