77 Ga. 682 | Ga. | 1886
..A certain tract of land was levied on by executions in favor of. plaintiffs in error against defendant in error, which was claimed by defendant, as heaxl of a family, as being exempt from levy and sale by reason of the fact that the same had been set apart as a homestead. On the trial of the case, it was shown that the defendant had applied to the ordinary- of Dekalb county as the head of a family consisting of himself and his daughter, Sarah Jenkins.
The jury found a verdict in favor of the claimant. The plaintiffs moved for a new trial, which was denied by the court, and they bring the case here, assigning as error the refusal of the court to grant the new trial on the grounds taken in the motion therefor.
"Was the verdict of the jury contrary to the law and without evidence to support it? We think that it was. It is clearly shown by the testimony of the claimant that he was not the head of a family when he applied for or when the homestead was allowed, and there is no proof to the contrary. The constitution of 1868, and the acts passed in pursuance thereof, allowed to “ each head of a family,” etc., “ an exemption and homestead,” etc. A single person who had no family was not entitled thereto. The act of 1809, pp. 23 and 24, code of 1873, §2005, enacts that every one who claims a homestead should act in perfect good faith-, and he who is guilty of willful fraud shall not have the benefit of the homestead; and this is so even though the party was constitutionally entitled to the homestead. What is to be said of one who is not entitled to the homestead, but who represents himself to be the head of a family consisting of himself and daughter, when in fact he has no such family ? It seems to us that this is a palpable fraud, and that under the act of 1869 above referred to, he loses the benefit of the homestead, if one can lose that which he never had. The act of the ordinary in ap
Judgment reversed.