Collier v. Simpson

Jackson, Chief Justice.

On a careful examination of the numerous cases cited by the learned and able counsel for plaintiffs in error in the Georgia reports touching this question made by this record, we find ourselves unable to take the case at bar without the principle ruled in Ross, administrator, vs. Worsham, 65 Ga., 624, decided by Judge Hall, now of this bench, as judge pro hacvice below, and affirmed unanimously by this court, tho lato Justice Crawford delivering tho opinion. That principle is that when a homestead and exemption in the bankrupt court is granted by the judge or register, such exemption is no more subject to levy and sale Ilian if it had been set apart by the ordinary having jurisdiction thereof. In that caso, as in this, the property had been levied on prior to tho adjudication and discharge of the bankrupt, and the facts are almost, if not completely, the same as this record develops, and substantially they are the same.

It must be conceded that our reports show some dicta and perhaps one or two decisions on kindred points which might logically lead to a different result; butitis believed that principle, practical principle, must bring us to the affirmance of Ross vs. Worsham and the overruling of all dicta, and, if there be any, all decisions to the contrary. Why should the bankrupt go into the state court of ordinary to do what the bankrupt court was expressly em*700powered to do by the then, bankrupt law ? Notwithstanding levy, notwithstanding sale, homestead of realty and exemption of personalty could have been set apart by the ordinary in the thing levied on before sale, and in the money in court after sale. If, therefore, the principle be sound that the exemption by the judge or register in the bankrupt court be as efficaoious as if made by the ordinary, the levy is not in the way; and, as in Ross vs. Worsham, the levy antedated the adjudication, and the principle was there ruled in the face of that fact, it can mean nothing less than that the exemption is good, and the judgment on a debt contracted after the constitution of 1868 cannot touch it unless it be for purchase money or removal of encumbrances or other exception in that constitution.

In this case, the debt is not such a one as comes up to removal of encumbrance m the sense of the constitution, but it is a mortgage to secure a fee contracted after the constitution of 1808, as was the debt in Ross vs. Worsham; and even if the services of the counsel were rendered in a case which involved the removal of an encumbrance on' the land, those services are not the removal thereof in the sense of the constitution, as money advanced to remove it would be.

I must say for myself that. I am not as clear in my conviction of the law of this case as I am usually in the opinions I write, because I cannot reconcile all the court has said on the subject to my own perfect satisfaction; but as the court below has so construed the law of this case, and as my brethren here agree with that court, and as I cannot take the case out of Ross, administrator, vs. Worsham, it is the best conclusion I can reach to hold the judgment below to be the law of the case.

Judgment affirmed.