Benton v. Maddox

16 S.E.2d 141, 65 Ga. App. 540, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 351
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 16, 1941
Docket28859, 28860.
StatusPublished

This text of 16 S.E.2d 141 (Benton v. Maddox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benton v. Maddox, 16 S.E.2d 141, 65 Ga. App. 540, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 351 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Stephens, P. J.

At the March term, 1940, of Putnam Superior Court there came oh to be tried the case of L. O. Benton, transferee, against J. D. Maddox, the same being an issue formed upon an affidavit of illegality filed by the defendant to the levy on certain personal property of the defendant of an execution against him in favor of the plaintiff. The defense interposed was that the defendant had never been served with the petition and process in the suit in which the judgment had been rendered; that he had never appeared and pleaded therein, and had never authorized any one to do so for him; that the judgment had been rendered by default, and that he had not had his day in court. At the former term of court, and on September 19, 1939, there was established by order of court, after hearing evidence, a true copy of the return of service by the sheriff on the defendant as made on the original *541 petition, it appearing that the original petition with return of service thereon had been lost. The return of service so established read as follows: “I have this day served the defendant J. D. Maddox, personally with a copy of the within petition and process. This 20th day of October, 1922. A. J. Walton, sheriff.” On that same day, September 19, 1939, the defendant amended his affidavit of illegality theretofore filed by alleging that at this terni of court it had come to his attention that the sheriff had made return of service on the petition to the effect that he had served the defendant with a copy of the petition and process on October 20, 1922; that the return is untrue and the defendant traverses the same, and prays that the sheriff be made a party. This amendment was allowed and ordered filed. It was also ordered that the sheriff be made a party and be served with the amendment and traverse twenty days before the next term of court. On October 23, 1939, the sheriff acknowledged service of the traverse of the return and of the order of court making him a party. The case proceeded to trial on the issue formed under the defendant’s affidavit of illegality as amended in which it was alleged that the defendant had never been served or had his day in court, and on the traverse of the return of service as established by order of court.

It is essential to the right of a defendant in execution who has filed an affidavit of illegality to the levy thereof to establish the invalidity of the proceedings on the ground of lack of service on him of the petition and process in the suit on which the judgment issued, where there appears an entry on the petition of service of the petition and process on the defendant, that the defendant traversed the entry of service at the first term “after notice of such entry is had by him, and before pleading to the merits.” Code, § 81-214; Lamb v. Dozier, 55 Ga. 677; Dozier v. Lamb, 59 Ga. 461 ; Knight v. Jones, 63 Ga. 481; Evans v. Smith, 101 Ga. 86 (28 S. E. 617).

The plaintiff moved to strike the defendant’s amendment to his affidavit of illegality in so far as it traversed the return of service made by the sheriff on October 20, 1922, on the ground that said traverse was filed too late, and not within the time required by law, in that it was not filed at the first term after the defendant had notice of the sheriff’s return and before the defendant had pleaded to the merits, and that the defendant had notice “of said *542 return of service at and prior to the preceding term of this court.” It was alleged in the motion that it appears from the record that the defendant, in his affidavit of illegality as originally filed in January, 1934, alleged that the sheriff made a return of service on the petition that he had served the affiant with a copy of the petition and process, and that the defendant by an amendment on March 23, 1938, to his affidavit of illegality traversed the return. The court overruled this motion and the plaintiff excepted pendente lite.

It appears from the record as here presented that in September, 1934, the defendant amended the affidavit of illegality and struck therefrom the allegation in the original affidavit that since the last term of court it had come to the defendant’s notice that the sheriff had made a return of service on the petition that he had served the affiant with a copy of the petition and process, and also striking the sheriff as a party. Therefore, so far as appears from the record, the affidavit of illegality as amended does not show,, as alleged in the motion to strike the defendant’s amendment which traversed the return and made the sheriff a party, that the defendant had notice of the existence of the return of service before the September, 1939, term of court, when the return was established as a lost paper and the defendant filed the amendment to his affidavit of illegality traversing this return and making the sheriff a party. The court therefore did not err in overruling the motion to strike the amendment to the affidavit of illegality traversing the return of the officer and making him a party.

It appeared from the evidence adduced on the trial of the issue formed by the defendant’s traverse to the return of service, and from the record, that if there had ever been any return of service by the officer entered on the original paper the return had become lost. Such loss was the occasion of the establishment as a lost paper of the return of service by the order of September 19, 1939. It also appeared that in the writ book in the office of the clerk of the court, in which copies of papers are kept as required by law, there appeared recorded a copy of the petition with the note sued on attached as an exhibit, the process, verdict and judgment by default of September 17, 1928, but there did not appear any copy of the return of service. This record was entirely silent as to service. Maddox testified that he had never been served with a copy *543 of the petition; that he did not know anything about the entry of service being made by Walton; that when the original affidavit was filed in February, 1934, he “had not heard or had notice of any entry of service being made in this case;” that on March 23, 1938, he “had not heard or had notice of an entry of service in this case,” and “had no knowledge of it;” that the only time he remembered “anything about any notice of entry of service was when they levied on” his cotton; that “up to that time” he “didn’t know anything about an entry of service in this case.” The witness was emphatic in his testimony that he had never been served. The sheriff testified positively that he remembered serving Mr. Maddox by handing him a copy of the petition.

While the burden was on the defendant to show, not only that he had not been served with the petition and process, but that he had traversed the entry of the sheriff at the first term after notice to him of the entry, and before pleading to the merits, he could establish these facts by evidence satisfactory to the jury. While the return of service is “evidence of a high order, and can only be set aside upon evidence which is not only clear and convincing but the strongest of which the nature of the ease will admit” (Denham v. Jones, 96 Ga. 130, 23 S. E. 78), it is not conclusive as to service.

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Related

Lamb v. Dozier
55 Ga. 677 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1876)
Dozier v. Lamb
59 Ga. 461 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1877)
Knight v. Jones
63 Ga. 481 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1879)
Denham v. Jones
23 S.E. 78 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1895)
Evans v. Smith
28 S.E. 617 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1897)
Phillips v. Wait
32 S.E. 842 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1899)
Benton v. Maddox
192 S.E. 316 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.E.2d 141, 65 Ga. App. 540, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-maddox-gactapp-1941.