Suggs v. Sapp

20 Ga. 100 | Ga. | 1856

By the Court.

Benning, J.

delivering the opinion.

Were the negroes levied on subject to the levy? This is the sole question.

A legacy does not vest in the legatee until the executor has assented to it, or, at least, until the time has come when he ought to assent to it; and that time does not come until it is seen with reasonable certainty, that he will not need the legacy to enable him to pay claims of a higher rank than the claim of a legatee. This is a general principal of law.

And until property has vested in a person, it is not subject to be seized and sold for his debts.

Had the executors, at the time of the levy, assented to Neal A. Sapp’s legacy in the negroes levied on? There is no pretence that they had. Had the time come when all higher claims on the negroes than Sapp’s, as legatee, had ceased to exist ? It had not; for it appears that debts to the amount of over three thousand dollars still existed against the executors, and that the will, itself, required the executors to hire out the negroes bequeathed in it to raise money with which to pay those debts. The legacy of Sapp was an undivided fourth of these negroes. It was these negroes, or a part of them, that were levied on. Therefore, the time had not come, when all higher claims upon the negroes had ceased to exist, and when, therefore, it was the duty of the executors to assent to Sapp’s legacy in the negroes. (See Colbert vs. Fox, 99 Dud. Rep.; Blake vs. Irving, 3 Kelly, 366; Bell vs. Bell, 1 Kelly, 367.)

The interest that a partner or tenant’in common, or other such tenant has, is a vested interest. In this, it differs from .such an interest as that of Neal A. Sapp; and that it is sub*102ject to seizure and sale for the debts of the partner or tenant, (as the case may be,) is because it is a vested interest.

We think, therefore, that the judgment of the Court below was right.

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