44 Ga. 133 | Ga. | 1871
1. Very clearly, the rights of the bankrupt to an exemption, or rather the quantity of his property that he is permitted to hold exempt from the claims of the assignee, is to be determined by the bankrupt law and the Bankrupt Court. The jurisdiction of the United States over the subject of bankruptcy, is plenary: Constitution United States, Article I., section 8, paragraph 4. The only doubt there can be, on the facts of this record, is whether our law does not give the wife and family such a specific interest in and lien upon the property of the bankrupt — not for his but for their sake — as is saved by the bankrupt law itself. That law does not pretend to take, as the property of the bankrupt, anything which is not legally and equitably his; nor does it contemplate interfering with specific liens third persons may have, under the laws of the State, upon property included within the schedule.
Our Constitution, on the subject of homesteads, and the Act of 1868, indicate, very clearly, that something more is meant by the homestead provisions than a mere exemption of the debtor’s property from levy and sale. The Constitution provides, that the General Assembly shall enact laws for the full and complete protection and security of the same, to the sole use and benefit of the families aforesaid: Constitution, Article VIL, section 1. And the Act of 1868, to carry this provision of the Constitution into effect, provides for the application, by a next friend of the wife, apart from the husband. The Act, too, clearly contemplates that, after the laying off of the homestead, it shall become the property of the wife. She is authorized to sue for trespasses upon it, and, at her death, provision is made for its disposition, as though it were not the property of the husband at all: Act of 1868, pamphlet, page 27.
But it is very clear that until it is laid off there is no property, or right of property in the family. The right of
We have in the case of Hardeman & White, 38th Georgia, analogized this right of the wife to the case of a preferred or prior debt, and we have spoken of the proceedings as a mode provided by law for its recovery. Perhaps that is the correct view of it.
In my judgment, the true course for these wives is to present the claims before the Bankrupt Court, not as an exemption of the husband’s property, but as a claim of their own against it, having, by the laws of Georgia, a preference over other claims against him.
We have in this case allowed the decision made at this
Judgment affirmed.