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Harris vs. Glenn et al.

against the specific property, and if the mortgagor had the defense of exemption, and meant to urge it, should he not have presented it in answer to the rule nisi? Quare.

4. After judgment of foreclosure has been rendered, and after the law granting exemption has been repealed, it is too late to have a portion of the land laid off, and, for the first time, assert exemption against the mortgage debt. 5. It is too late, also, to say that the debt was not due according to the real contract between the parties, or that payments had been made before foreclosure which were not credited.

6. Land subject to levy and sale for purchase money, and under mortgage for the same, is not disincumbered so long as any of the purchase money remains unpaid. No part of the tract is free until the whole debt is discharged. See Sale vs. Wingfield, decided at the present term.

Homestead. Vendor and purchaser. Laws. Debtor and creditor. Constitutional law. Mortgage. Before Judge HALL. Newton county. At Chambers. January 8th, 1876.

Reported in the opinion.

EMMETT & WOMACK, for plaintiff in error.

MCCAY & TRIPPE; J. C. BARTON, for defendants.

BLECKLEY, Judge.

1n 1871 the vendor of certain lands conveyed the same by deed to the vendee. At the same time the latter gave to the former a mortgage upon it to secure the purchase money. Part of the money was paid in 1872, part in 1873, and part in March, 1874. These payments, altogether, amounted to about two-fifths of the price. In March, 1875, the vendor commenced the ordinary proceeding at law, to foreclose the mortgage for the balance. A rule nisi was granted; and in September thereafter, the mortgage was foreclosed in due form by rule absolute. In November following, the mortgage fi. fa., founded on this foreclosure, was levied upon the land. While the sheriff's advertisement for sale was running, the vendee made out a schedule claiming certain personalty and seventy acres of the land as exempt, returned the same to the ordinary, and had it recorded, in terms of section 2042 of the

Harris vs. Glenn et al.

Code. He also had the seventy acres surveyed and a plat thereof made and recorded, as required by section 2042 of the Code. The whole tract contained two hundred and fifty acres. The claim of exemption was not under the constitution, but under section 2040 of the Code, the vendee being the head of a family and having four children under sixteen years of age. When he created the debt he had seven children under that age. The sheriff, on the 4th of January, 1876, sold the whole tract under the levy, disregarding the claim of exemption, full notice of which was given at the time and place of sale before the property was sold. The mortgagee became the purchaser; and it is to restrain the sheriff from putting him in possession of the seventy acres claimed as exempt that the injunction is prayed for. The chancellor denied the injunction, and we affirm his judgment.

1. It has already been ruled by this court that the act of 1874, modifying the Code so as to exclude the exemption right against a debt for purchase money, applies to debts made prior to the passage of the act, as well as to those made subsequently: Sparger vs. Cumpton, 54 Georgia Reports, 355. We have not been called upon to review that decision, and we are apprised of no reason for distrusting its soundness.

2. But the point has been made that the act thus construed is unconstitutional as divesting vested rights. Debtors have no vested right not to pay their debts. What they have and what they acquire the state may subject to legal process for the satisfaction of creditors. If the state will furnish the process and allow it to run, nothing that debtors own is beyond its reach. There is no fastness that can afford shelter against the public authority. Exemption of property from levy and sale for the payment of debts, is but a privilege for the time being-mere grace and favor, dependent on the will of the state. An exemption which exists by statute may be reduced or withdrawn by statute; and even constitutional exemptions may be terminated by the same power that created them, the people, expressing their sovereign will by amendment of the organic law. Exemption is but a statutory or

Harris vs. Glenn et al.

constitutional shield, which being removed, the exposure to process is the same as if it had never been interposed: 13 Wis., 238; Cooley on Con. Lim., 383; 33 Georgia Reports, Supplement, 38. So long as the law exists by which exemption is granted and secured, the right to enjoy the exemption exists and should have the same protection from judicial tribunals that is accorded to any other right. But when the law is gone the right is gone.

3. In the case of a mortgage on land it may be questioned whether the right should not be asserted before judgment has passed for foreclosure. The judgment goes against the specific property, and is a mandate to the sheriff to sell it: Code, section 3698; 13 Georgia Reports, 389; 18 Ibid., 488; 3 Wall., 334.

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4. Be this as it may, it is certainly too late to move in the matter, not only after foreclosure but after the law has been repealed on which the exemption depended. The repeal was in February, 1874, and not until December, 1875, did the mortgagor make any claim to the exemption. Under the provisions of the Code he might have asserted his claim and had the property laid off as soon as he acquired title to the land. There was no compulsion upon him to defer it from 1871 to 1875. He acted voluntarily, and must take the consequences of his procrastination. It is not certain, however, that his situation would have been any better after the act of 1874 was passed, if he had before that time claimed the exemption and had it laid off. Precisely what effect that would have had may be left undetermined.

5. The bill alleges that according to the real contract between the parties, though otherwise reduced to writing, the mortgage debt was not due, and that certain payments were made before the judgment of foreclosure which were not credited. These questions were concluded by the judgment, to say nothing, as to the former, of the rule by which all cotemporaneous stipulations are swallowed up in the writing. It does not appear that the notes, or the mortgage given to

Thweatt et al. vs. Gammell et al.

secure them, were written otherwise than as both parties intended they should be written.

6. The bill goes, in part, on the theory that as much of the purchase money has been paid, some of the land is paid for in full, and as to that much the debt should not be treated as a debt for purchase money. The principle of apportionment is invoked. An adverse decision on this point has already been made during the present term, in a case which is cited in the head-note.

Judgment affirmed.

JAMES T. THWEATT et al., plaintiffs in error, vs. ABRAM GAMMELL et al., defendants in error.

Where an injunction restraining the sale of certain mules was violated, and the answer to the rule was that they were exempted as the property of one of the defendants by the ordinary and sold by his leave, and where both defendants had mortgaged the mules in the same deed to complainants to secure them as the sureties of one of them on an administrator's bond, and the evidence before the chancellor on the question whether one or both defendants owned the mules, was conflicting, and where one of the defendants sold the mules in violation of the injunction, and the evidence shows the complicity of the other therein:

Held, that this court will not control the discretion of the circuit judge in punishing both defendants by commanding them to return the mules or pay into court the purchase money therefor, or be committed for contempt in default thereof.

Injunction. Contempt. Muscogee Superior Court.

Reported in the opinion.

Before Judge JAMES JOHNSON.
November Term, 1874.

H. L. BENNING; R. J. MOSES, for plaintiffs in error. PEABODY & BRANNON; L. F. GARRARD, for defendants.

JACKSON, Judge.

Gammell and Stapler brought a bill in equity against the Thweatts, alleging that the said Thweatts had jointly mortgaged to them eighteen mules and two horses, to save them

Thweatt et al. vs. Gammell et al.

harmless as sureties on a temporary bond given by James T. Thweatt as administrator of Owen Thomas; that suit had been brought on that bond by the executors of Thomas, and that they, the sureties, were liable for at least $2,000 00; that the Thweatts were insolvent, were unable to maintain the mortgaged property and were trying to sell it, and prayed for an injunction and receiver. The injunction was granted, prohibiting the Thweatts from removing the mules and horses beyond the limits of the state, and from selling the same. This injunction was afterwards made perpetual. At a subsequent term of the court Gammell and Stapler filed a petition alleging that the Thweatts had disobeyed the injunction and sold the mules, and praying that they be punished for contempt, and ordered to bring back the mules or pay the purchase money into court. The defendants admitted that they had disposed of several of the mules, but by consent of the other side, and that Robert Thweatt had sold seven that had been exempted to him under the constitution and act of 1868, but it does not appear that he was the head of a family. James T. Thweatt was proved to have said that he would get the mules released the next day, and pocket the money and spend it, and he himself swore that he did not remember saying that he would pocket the money and spend it, but admitted "that he intended to convey the idea that he would sell the mules for the use of himself and the said Robert R., they both thinking that they would have the right to do this under the homestead law, and being goaded on by the conduct of said Gammell and Stapler to insist on all of their legal rights." It was shown that Gammell and Stapler had been forced to pay the judgment against them as sureties of James T. Thweatt, between $700 and $800 00 each, and that the seven mules brought $965 00. Affidavits that the seven mules belonged to Robert, and that they were the joint property of both of the Thweatts, were read pro and con.

The chancellor directed that the Thweatts pay into court the sum of $965 00, or bring back the mules, or be commit

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