Carhart v. Vann

Montgomery, Judge.

Tit common law, or rather by the operation of the statute of Westminster. 2, 13 Ed., 1, judgment liens existed against the lands of the debtor from the first day of the term at which the judgment was obtained. The statute of frauds, sections 13, 14 and 15, altered the rule so far as purchasers were concerned, and enacted that the judgment as to them should date from the time at which it was actually obtained. If, after judgment against the debtor, he died, his land passed to his heir, cumbered with the judgment lien, the creditor being obliged, of course, to look first to the personal assets in ' the hands of the executor or administrator for the payment. By the 16th section of the statute of frauds, these were bound by the judgment only from the time the execution was delivered to the sheriff; and the section required the sheriff to indorse on the execution the date of the delivery to him; “for the better manifestation of the said time.” This judgment lien so fixed upon the personal assets did not pi-event the executor or administrator from disposing of them, the rule being “that an executor or administrator has an absolute power of disposal over the whole personal effects of his testator or intestate; and that they cannot be followed by creditors, much loss by legatees, general or specific, into the hands of the alienee. The principle is that the executor or administrator in many instances must sell in order to *391perform his duty in paying debts, etc.; and no one would deal with an executor or administrator ifliable afterwards to be called to account:” 2 Williams’ Executors, 670, (2d American Edition, from 2 London;) Toller’s Executors, book 3, chap. 1, sec. III.

Lord Thurlow, in Scott vs. Tyler, 2 Dick., 725, (quoted in Wms’ Ex’rs, 671) says, “It is of great consequence that no rule should be laid down here which may impede executors in their administration, or render their disposition of the testator’s effects unsafe or uncertain to a purchaser. His title is complete by sale and delivery. What becomes of the price is of no concern to him.” Again in Farr et al. vs. Newman, 4 T. R., 630, Grose, J., says, “The power of selling or disposing of the goods of the testator the executor must have; it is necessarily incident to his office; without that power his trust cannot be executed, nor can the purposes for which it is given be answered. Therefore, when he sells, the law intends that he sells the goods of the testator to answer the purposes for which the power of selling was given; and in so doing he does that which is necessary to his authority, and therefore lawful, just and right.” See also Buller, Judge’s opinion; Ibid., 641, and Ashhurst’s, page 644; see 1 Kelly, 344; 7 Johns. Ch., 150. The judgment creditor whose lieu attached to the personalty, living the debtor, and within a year before his death, may levy upon such personalty, token found in the hands of the executor or administrator: 2 Wms’ Ex’rs, 1422. I will add that a judgment is only a general security, not a specific lien upon the property of the debtor: 2 Tidd’s Prac., 936. Under the authorities quoted, the executor or administrator may, at common law, divest the general lien of a judgment which has. attached upon the goods of the testator or intestate by placing the execution in the hands of the sheriff before the death of the debtor. Whether they can sell the property of the testator so as to divest specific liens as a mortgage, for instance, it is not necessary to consider.

By our law, all the property of a debtor is bound by a *392judgment against him from the time of its rendition. So far as personalty, then, is concerned, if the debtor die after judgment, no distinction is perceived between the power of the executor or administrator to dispose of it and divest the judgment lien under our statute, and the power under the statute of frauds where the execution was placed .in the sheriff’s hands before the death of the debtor. But the power of the representative to dispose of the real estate of the decedent is more limited. He can only sell that when necessary to pay debts, or for purposes of distribution: Code 2518.

We are very clear that a sale of land to pay debts would divest a judgment lien. The reasons given for divesting judgment liens on personalty apply with full force. Whether a sale for purposes of distribution alone would do so, we are not now prepared to say. Where the record fails to disclose the purpose of the sale and the condition of the estate, but does disclose an outstanding judgment against the deceased, we will not presume that the sale was for distribution. Indeed, the more natural presumption would be that the sale was for the payment of'debts, and that the money is now in the hands of the administrators for that purpose, or has been paid in satisfaction of debts of higher dignity than that of the judgment creditor. For it is to be observed that although a judgment debt may be the highest in dignity during the life of the debtor, on his death it at once takes rank below four other classes: 1st. Funeral expenses. 2d. Expenses of administration, including a provision for the support of the family of the deceased debtor. 3d. Taxes and other debts due the State, or United States. 4th. Debts due by the deceased as trustee for any appropriation of trust funds to his own use. To these may be added the widow’s claim for dower. See Simmons vs. Latimer, 37 Georgia, 495; Code, 2494. This enumeration shows the necessity of allowing the administrator or executor to divest judgment liens by sale of the decedents’ property to pay the debts of the estate. Otherwise, the practical effect would be to give the judgment debt priority over the four classes hereinbefore named, for prop*393erty would bring little or nothing at administrator’s sale, if liable to be afterwards levied on, and sold under judgments obtained against the intestate.

Our conclusion then is, that a sale of land by an administrator, legally made for the payment of debts of the intestate, divsets judgment liens, and where the record fails to show in express terms that the estate is solvent, and that the property was sold for distribution alone, but does show an outstanding unsatisfied judgment against the estate which has been levied on the land sold by the administrator, the more natural presumption is, that the sale by the administrator was for the purpose of paying the debts of the estate, and that being so, the lien of judgments obtained in the lifetime of the intestate is divested by the sale.

Judgment affirmed.