Lowe v. Moore

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] It was the duty of the Court, in this case, to apply the money raised out of the defendant in execution’s property to the oldest lien before it. Judgments bind all the property of the defendant from their date. Lowe’s judgment was the oldest, and it was plainly entitled to the money, if it was a valid, subsisting *196judgment. Was it? We think it was. The objection to it was, that it had been levied upon real estate of the defendant; that a claim had been put in to the real estate — was pending — and at the then term of that Court, had been tried before a Petit Jury, and a verdict rendered in favor of the claimant. All this does not interfere one whit with the lien of the judgment. A levy on lands — disposed of or not, accounted for or not — does not affect it. If the money has been raised on it and paid to the judgment, or is in the hands of the officer, that is a different thing. If paid, of course it is extinct. If there is money in the hands of the officer, upon which it has lien, it will be applied to it. Here, there is a levy. That, I say, does not affect the right of the execution levied to take this fund, if it is the oldest. A levy on land is no satisfaction. DcLoach & Wilcoxson vs. Myrick, 6 Ga. R. 410. Newton vs. Nunnally, 4 Ga. R. 356. Prince's Dig. 426.

The equitable principle, that if A and B have liens on the property of the same person, and A attaches upon two funds and B upon but one, A will be turned upon that fund upon which B has no lien, in order that both may be paid, has been invoked to sustain the right of the junior Ji. fa. to this money. The principle is a sound one, but has no application here. Non-constat, that Lowe’s lien attached upon two funds — constat, the contrary. It does not appear that the land levied on was subject to it; but it does appear, that its lien on the land was contested — a third person had claimed it. Not only so, butit does appear, by the record, that upon the trial of that claim, a Jury had found in favor of the claimant and against the lien.

[2.] The Judge of the Superior Court, in distributing a fund fore him, acts upon equitable principles; but his action is upon a fund in hand, and confessedly now for distribution. This land fund was not in hand — it was judicially known to him that it was in litigation, and so far as the proof went, he knew that the judgment of Lowe did not attach upon it. Nothing short of a bill and a decree thereon, adjudging the land subject to Lowe’s fi. fa. would, in my judgment, authorize the postponement of his lien and the payment of this money to a junior judgment.

[3.] The Court ruled, that this oldest judgment might take the money, if the plaintiff, Lowe, would dismiss his levy on the land, or agree not to enter an appeal from the verdict of the Petit Jury, in the claim case. This is not a case where the Court had *197power to impose conditions. The plaintiff, Lowe, had the right to stand upon his legal rights. They were not doubtful. The Court had no power to set aside a valid, subsisting lien. The law gave it, and there was no discretion in the Court to put the enforcement of it, upon any terms, much less such as are onerous and might prove the occasion of actual loss to the plaintiff.

Let the judgment be reversed.