95 Ga. 415 | Ga. | 1895
An execution in favor of the American Freehold Land Mortgage Company of London, Limited, based on a judgment of March 20th, 1893, was levied on lot of laud number 160 in the 2d district of Crawford county, as the propei’ty of John M. Sharp, defendant in execution. The property was claimed by Sharp as the head of a family, under the homestead law. The case was submitted to the presiding judge upon all questions of law and fact, who found the property subject; and to this ruling the claimant excepted.
It appeared at the trial, that the judgment from which the execution issued was based upon a promissory note of the defendant in execution, dated December 1st, 1891, and containing a waiver of homestead and exemption. The claimant introduced the homestead papers, which showed that the petition was filed November 2d, 1868, approved November 14th, 1868, and recorded September 25th, 1877. The petition stated that Sharp was the owner of the land in controversy, with other laud, and of certain personalty. He also introduced a petition to amend the application by alleging that he was the head of a family consisting of his wife and minor children, and by alleging that he was a citizen of and resided in Crawford county; also an order of the ordinary allow
We think the court erred in finding the property subject. All the presumptions were in favor of the validity of the homestead, and no reason appears for treating it as invalid. See McDonald v. Williams, 94 Ga. 515. Under the law as it stood at the time the homestead was granted, it was not essential that the names of the beneficiaries should be set out in the application. Horton v. Summers, 62 Ga. 302(2), and eases cited; Wilder & Son v. Frederick, 67 Ga. 669(2). As to the amendment, see Hardin v. McCord, 72 Ga. 239(2). If there was a valid grant of a homestead, the waiver was ineffectual. No such waiver is effectual after the homestead has been set .apart. The fact that the homestead papers were not recorded until 1877, and that the book in which they were recorded was subsequently lost, did not affect the rights of the beneficiaries. The debt to which the plaintiff in execution was seeking to subject the property was contracted after the homestead papers were recorded; and the loss or destruction of the record could not impair any rights the beneficiaries may have acquired, nor affect