Beers v. Dawson
This text of 8 Ga. 556 (Beers v. Dawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
So far as we arc informed, the uniform practice in this State, under our claim laws, has been otherwise. The claimant makes oath that the property levied on is his. The object of this prd[558]*558ceecling is, to enable him to protect his own property from sale, and not the property of any one else. The plaintiff in fi. fa. comes into Court to litigate the title of the claimant, and not that of some third person, between whom and the claimant there is no privity. Is it not absurd for the claimant to make oath, as he is required to do, that the properly is ids, and then show on the trial that it belonged to another? "What right has a volunteer thus to interpose between the creditor and his debtor % What is it to him, that somebody has the title, other than iho defendant, provided he himself has none ? Will he be permitted to protect himself from the penalty of his bond by such proof?
I need scarcely repeat what has been more than once before said in substance by this Court, that formerly, an absolute sale of chattels, unaccompanied with possession, was fraudulent in law, and void as against creditors; but that the modern rule is, that the possession was susceptible of explanation. If none, however, is given, the presumption becomes conclusive.
Upon both grounds, then, the plaintiff in error is entitled to have the judgment below "reversed.
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8 Ga. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beers-v-dawson-ga-1850.