139 Ga. 669 | Ga. | 1913
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The application of the complaining creditors for a permanent receiver, and the motion by the bankrupt’s trustee to require the temporary receiver to turn over to him the tract of land for administration in the United States court, were heard together: The judgment under review is silent as to any action by the court upon the creditors’ application for a permanent receiver; but notwithstanding the court’s omission in this regard, it becomes necessary, in passing upon the propriety of the judgment to which exception is taken, to consider whether the evidence on the interlocutory hearing presented a case for receivership.
It is contended that though the plaintiffs’ petition may not have
Under the facts developed on the interlocutory hearing, have the creditors whose judgments were obtained after the record of the security deed the right to subject the debtor’s equity of redemption as an equitable asset? Under the statute (Civil Code, §§ 6037, 6039) the holder of a bond for titles has no leviable interest in the land until he becomes invested with the legal title. The statute has been held applicable to the grantor in a security deed, who has taken from his. grantee a bond to reconvey upon payment of the debt. Before creditors of a grantor in a security deed can levy upon his-interest in the land, there must be a redemption of the property, which can be accomplished only by payment of the secured debt. Phinizy v. Clark, 62 Ga. 623; Groves v. Williams, 69 Ga. 614; Shumate v. McLendon, 120 Ga. 396 (48 S. E. 10.) The mere fact that the lien of a judgment creditor, obtained against the grantor subsequently- to the making of the - security deed, can
There being no ground for the appointment of a permanent receiver, the next question is, what disposition of the land in the hands of the temporary receiver should have been made. As we have shown, the trustee was not entitled, to the possession of the property, for the reason that at the time of the bankrupt’s adjudication the property was in custodia legis by virtue of the levy of a lien obtained more than four months prior to the bankruptcy. It was improper to appoint a permanent receiver under the facts developed at the hearing. Therefore the court should have refused the application for a receivership and also the application of the trustee of the bankrupt, and remanded the property to the sheriff, from whose custody it was taken, by the appointment of a temporary receiver, to await the final disposition of the litigation pending in Banks superior court, to wit: the issue formed by the filing of a claim to the levy of the distress warrant.
Judgment reversed.