On December 8, 1877, a homestead was set apart to W. E. Hodges under the provisions of the Code of 1873, § 2040 et serp, now embraced in Civil Code, § 2866 et seep In December, 1879, Hodges attempted to convey by deed the reversionary interest in the land set apart as a homestead. Executions founded on judgments rendered in 1895 against Hodges were levied on the land, and claims were interposed by the vendees in the deed. The court directed a verdict in favor of the claimants, and the plaintiffs in execution excepted. The case was argued here on the assumption that the same rule as to the power of the head of a family to alienate the homestead property would apply to the homestead set apart under the statutory provisions above referred to as applied to what is known as the constitutional homestead; and we were asked
Walker v. Hodges
113 Ga. 1042 | Ga. | 1901
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