Stephenson v. Eberhart & Son
Stephenson v. Eberhart & Son
Opinion of the Court
Under the 5th section of the act of the 16th of September, 1878, (acts, p. 100; code, §2025,) which is an act to carry into effect a certain section of the constitution of 1877, in relation to the sale and reinvestment of the proceeds of property set apart as a homestead, a sale of the property in controversy was ordered by the chancellor for reinvestment, and the plaintiffs in error became the purchasers at that sale. By the provisions of that act, where the sale of the homestead is made in the manner therein prescribed, it operates to pass to the purchaser the “entire interest and title of the beneficiaries in the exempted property”; and also “the interest and title owned, before the exemption was made, by the party out of whose estate the property was so exempted ”; and it provided that the purchaser shall receive the property and hold the same as to all liens thereon against the original debtor, with the
The consent of the lien creditors to transfer their lfens to the property purchased by the proceeds of the sale, and to divest them from the property for which this was substituted, was not obtained, but a creditor of the head of the family, after the property was sold to the purchasers under this decree made by the chancellor in conformity with the statute, proceeded to levy an execution upon the land thus purchased, subject to the homestead charge or incumbrance laid upon it. The object of this levy was to subject the interest in reversion, as it is styled, of the debtor in this homestead, in the hands of the purchaser, to the payment of the execution levied, while the homestead and exemption were still in full force and before there was a termination or removal of the homestead charge or incumbrance from the estate. It is not contended that, had the property with the homestead on it remained in the hands of the debtor’s family, the remainder or reversionary interest of the owner could have been levied on before the termination of the homestead; and had it been, the contention would have been unavailing, as was decided by this court in the case of Jolly vs. Lofton, 61 Ga. 154.
Now, as by the express terms of the statute of 1878, this purchaser was substituted for the family of the debtor, with the provision in his favor that he should be exempted from interference by these judgment creditors, to the same extent and for the same length of time that the debtor and his family would be exempted, we think that this law is decisive of the point made and passed on in this case. Indeed, the language of this statute is so plain that it does not stand in need of interpretation. It construes itself, and exempts the property purchased, in the hands of the
It is insisted, however, that according to the decision of this court in two cases (Skinner vs. Moye, 69 Ga. 476, and the City Bank of Macon vs. Smisson, 73 Id. 423), this case is taken out of the operation of this rule; but each of these cases is clearly distinguishable in its circumstances from the one at bar. In the latter of these, the debtor and his family applied for the sale of this land, not for the purpose of reinvesting the proceeds of the sale in other property in the State of Georgia, but with a view of its removal out of the jurisdiction of the court to the State' of Texas, where they purposed to make a similar investment. This was treated as a deliberate abandonment and renunciation of the homestead, and a relinquishment of the rights of the beneficiaries to the same, and seems to have been regarded as effectually terminating their interests therein, as would the happening of other events, which, under the provisions of the law, free the estate from the charge put upon it, such as the death of the beneficiaries, or the attainment of majority by the minor children, or the marriage of the female children of the family and their departure from the paternal roof. Upon that'ground, and that ground alone, this court held, that not only the reversion of the homestead, but the entire property on which it was laid, became subject to the payment of the debts of the head of the family. In the other case cited (Skinner vs. Moye), the sale was made in accordance with an act held to be unconstitutional, and was acquiesced in for a considerable length of time. It was not a sale made under the provisions either of this act or of the act of 1876, of which this is amendatory, or rather for which it was a substitute.
It is needless to enlarge upon the reasons for preventing the interference by creditors with the property upon which a homestead is charged. Among others, it is evident that
Judgment reversed.
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