It appears from the record in this case, that on the 6th’ day of February, 1878, W. H. Harper and Ida B. Harper executed and delivered to R. B. Ethridge a chattel mortgage on one bay horse mule, to secure a debt for the sum of $80.00, due 1st October, 1878, by them to Ethridge; that on 10th April, 1878, the mortgage was transferred to de-. fendants in error; on the 28th of March, 1879, the mortgage was foreclosed by defendants in error, and a mortgage fi. fa. issued and levied upon the mule mortgaged. To this levy Ida B. Harper interposed her claim to said property, “ as not being the property of W. H. Harper and Ida Harper,” “ but is the property of deponent for her minor child, eight months old.” The cause went to the superior court by appeal, and the property was found subject to the ft. fa., said judgment dated 2d September, 1879. On the 10th September, 1879, Ida B. Harper filed her affidavit of illegality to the further proceeding of said execution on the grounds :
1st. That the property levied on is her property, and-the debt which the mortgage was given to secure was that of her husband and the co-defendant, and that her name should only appear as security.
■ 2d. Because at the time of executing said mortgage deponent was a minor, a fact well known to said Ethridge.
Said illegality having been brought before the superior court by appeal, it was agreed that the same should be submitted to the decision of the court without a jury, and that the record of the claim case between the same parties should be considered in evidence. It was also admit
Under this section of the Code the plaintiff in error was
The court below seemed to regard the verdict and judgment rendered on the issue made in the claim suit as having adjudicated the other questions she made in her affidavit of illegality. A claim case is allowed to be instituted to test the title of the defendant in fi. fa. to the property levied on, and this seems to have been, from the record, the only issue determined by that judgment. To claim property and assert title to it against a creditor seeking to subject it, is one issue our statute provides for. To file an affidavit of illegality to a mortgage ft. fa. issued against personal property by a mortgagor, and avail himself of any defense known to the law which goes to show ' the amount claimed is not due, is a very different issue, and separate and distinct from the other, and we do not see how the adjudication of the one is a bar in law to the prosecution of the other.
We are of opinion, if the affidavit of illegality had not been dismissed by the court on the grounds stated (erro, neously as we think), it was the right of the defendant to have had the mortgage fi.fa. vacated on motion upon the grounds taken, this question having been settled by this court in 54 Ga., 167, and Rich vs. Colquitt, Governor, February Term, 1880.
Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.
