184 Ga. 628 | Ga. | 1937
Mrs. Lora Tanner, on April 6, 1925, obtained a loan from the Federal Land Bank of Columbia, South Carolina, the same maturing in 34 years, and being payable principal and interest in 68 semi-annual installments, and to secure the payment thereof she conveyed to the bank certain farm lands which were in cultivation, and on which the grantor resided. On January 19, 1934, during the October adjourned term, 1933, of Coffee superior court, A. W. Wilson, in a suit on notes against Mrs. Tanner, obtained a verdict in his favor for $1,379.45. On the next day Mrs. Tanner moved for a new trial upon the general grounds, and in' the order approving the motion and issuing a
On June 3, 1935, the judgment overruling the motion for new trial filed by Mrs. Tanner, in the ease in which A. W. Wilson procured said judgment against her, was affirmed by the Supreme Court. Tanner v. Wilson, 180 Ga. 694 (180 S. E. 614). On June 24, 1935, the remittitur therein was received by the clerk
On August 25, 1935, G. J. Tanner filed his petition in Coffee superior court against A. W. Wilson, the judgment creditor, R. C. Relihan, sheriff of the county, and the Federal Land Bank, seeking to cancel certain instruments and to enjoin Wilson and the sheriff from selling the premises involved pursuant to said levy and advertisement under the execution issued on said judgment on May 8, 1934; from which petition appear the foregoing facts,
To begin with, there was no lis pendens on account of the pending suit against Mrs. Lora Tanner in Coffee County. “One of the essentials of a valid and effective lis pendens is that the liti
Where a motion for new trial is filed, it does not of itself operate to supersede further proceedings in the cause; but when it is expressly so provided in the order granting a rule nisi, and thereafter in the order awarding to the movant an extension of time within which to prepare and perfect her amended motion and brief of the evidence it is provided that “this motion and order act as a supersedeas until the final order disposing of this motion by the court,” a supersedeas is in effect from the signing of the first order until the final disposition of the motion for new trial. Code, § 70-307; Harris v. Gano, 117 Ga. 934 (44 S. E. 11); Liverpool & London &c. Co. v. Peoples Bank, 143 Ga. 355, 360 (85 S. E. 114); Hightower v. Hodges, 5 Ga. App. 408 (63 S. E. 541); Southern Express Co. v. Hunnicutt, 5 Ga. App. 262 (63 S. E. 26); Montgomery v. King, 125 Ga. 388, 390 (54 S. E. 135), and cit.; 10 Cum. Dig. 691; 11 Enc. Dig. 1105. Upon the overruling of the motion for new trial, and within the time prescribed by law, Mrs. Tanner (the judgment debtor) filed her bill of exceptions to this court in forma pauperis, which in itself acted as a supersedeas until disposition of the case in this court and the filing of the remittitur in the trial court. Code, §§ 6-1001, 6-1002, 6-1004, 6-1805; Truluck v. Peeples, 1 Ga. 1; Cummings v. Clegg, 82 Ga. 763 (9 S. E. 1042); Montgomery v. King, supra; Wheeler v. Wheeler, 139 Ga. 608 (77 S. E. 817). “The general rule is that a supersedeas suspends all further proceedings in the suit in which the judgment superseded is rendered, such as are based upon and relate to the carrying into effect of that judgment.” Barnett v. Strain, 153 Ga. 43 (111 S. E. 574), and cit.; West v. Gainesville Bank, 158 Ga. 640, 641 (123 S. E. 870). “Under
So, applying the principles of law as to the effect of a supersedeas on the trial court, it necessarily follows that the judgment was entered and signed during a time when the same was superseded, and the court was without jurisdiction to take any steps to make the verdict final or to enforce the verdict and judgment by issuing airy execution thereon; and that the proceedings taken to bind defendant’s property as to the judgment in the case of Wilson y. Tanner were without effect as against the plaintiff in this case. The execution was issued on such judgment in May, about five months after the return of the verdict and four months after the ineffectual entering of the judgment on the verdict, and at that time the motion for new trial was still pending, and'the order of supersedeas provided that it was to be effective until the motion for new trial was finally disposed of. Then, upon the overruling of this motion, the plaintiff within the time prescribed by law brought her bill of exceptions to this court in forma pauperis (see Harris v. Gano, supra), mid the enforcement of the original verdict was superseded further until the final disposition of the case in this court and the receipt of the remittitur of this court by the trial court. The conveyance by Mrs. Tanner (the judgment debtor) of her equity in these premises to the plaintiff in this case was made during the period when all such proceedings to enter the judgment and to enforce the same in the trial court were superseded. Under the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff was a bona fide purchaser without notice and for value, and at a time when there was no lien on the premises by reason of such verdict. All action taken by the trial court in that case during the time it was superseded, as against third parties in good faith, was void and without effect, the court not having jurisdiction so to act. Therefore the petition set out a cause of action for cancellation of the instruments, and for the relief sought. In this.view of the case it is unnecessary to pass on the constitutional questions raised. Where there is any other ground in a case upon which
Judgment reversed.