Chambers v. Collier

4 Ga. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1848
DocketNo. 23
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 4 Ga. 193 (Chambers v. Collier) 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.

Bluebook
Chambers v. Collier, 4 Ga. 193 (Ga. 1848).

Opinion

By the Court

Lubípiun; J.

delivering the opinion.

In December, 1839, James Chambers bought of Charles [194]*194McDowell, as executor of P. Scott, deceased, a lot and a half of land in tbe 9th district of originally Monroe, now Pike counity, at the price of $16-15 52,for which he gave his note, with JohnW. Goppedge as security — due 25th of December, 1840. The debt not having been paid at maturity, it was sued to judgment, and a recovery had at the March Term, 1842', of Pike Superior Court, for $1258 73, the balance due thereon. On the first Tuesday in March, 1843, there still remaining due and unpaid on the execution, $1127 20, the same tract of land for which the debt was contracted, was sold by Mathew Orr, Sheriff, when McDowell, the plaintiff, became the purchaser, for. the sum of $405. When property of the defendant was sold, as appears by the entry on the the fi. fa. on the 3d of June, 1843, in pursuance of a previous-agreement, made between Chambers and McDowell, as to the' terms of which there is some conflict of testimony, Chambers' gave to McDowell his three notes, with Madison R. Chambers John W. and Thomas Coppedge as securities — one for $350 20,, due 25th of Dec., 1843 ; another for $373, due 25th of Dec., 1844; and the other for $404, due 25th of Dec., 1845 — amounting altogether to exactly the balance due apparently on the fi.fa., together with McDowell’s bid for the land. The first of these in-stalments was paid, and fifty dollars on the second. On the 26th’ of October, 1845, McDowell wrote an order to Orr who had ceased to be High Sheriff, but was Deputy to his successor, informing him that he had sold the land occupied by Chambers to William M. Collier, and requiring him to put Collier in possession. Orr requested N. P. Daniel, his co-deputy, to officiate. Daniel, on the evening' of the 5th of November, 1845, in company with some four or five others, Collier among the rest, came to the house of Chambers and demanded possession. Chambers refused to surrender, and desired to know by what authority it was exacted. Daniel stated that he had none other but. the order from; McDowell to Orr. Collier remarked that he had come to get possession, and that he meant to have it, and added, angrily, that if it were not for the law he would take Chambers out and stamp him. Some of the company observed to Chambers that resistance would be useless, for that the whole district would be summoned, if necessary, to dispossess) him. His house was then entered and his goods removed — some into the yard, and a part of them into the road — and some small articles were broken in. the-[195]*195removal. The family were turned out — the request of Chambers’ wife to be permitted to remain during the night on account of the inclemency of the weather, and the feebleness of her health, being refused. The house was closed and Collier took possession of the.keys.

On the day ensuing, Chambers took out process, under the statute for a forcible entry and detainer, and a trial was had which resulted in a verdict against him. He applied for and obtained a certiorari, which being sustained on the hearing, a new trial was ordered, which terminated as the first. A second certio-rari was sought upon various grounds, but was dismissed upon argument, it being the opinion of the presiding Judge that there was no sufficient cause shown to sustain said certiorari, and it is to reverse this judgment that this writ of error is brought.

Counsel do not agree as to what are the true questions made by the transcript of the record and bill of exceptions. Perhaps this simple view may assist to unravel the tangled skein. The plaintiff’s case is made by his petition for a certiorari and the return made thereto by the magistrates. He is entitled to all the rights made by these pleadings. In his petition he complains that the law was not administered according to the statement of facts there presented. If it was not, and the statement there made be true and consistent with what transpired in the Justice’s Court, he was entitled to the interposition of the Superior Court, for the purpose of correcting all errors committed in the primary tribunal.

Judge Floyd assumed, very properly, that the agreement set up by Chambers in bar of Collier’s statutory right to be put in possession of the purchased premises, was a question of fact for the jury, and there having been concurrent verdicts by two successive juries, he determined that he would not disturb their finding and therefore dismissed the c&rtiorari.

[1.] Now, as a general rule, this position is correct. We think, however, that the Judge erred in its application to the facts of this case. If the finding of the jury be clearly against law, especially where an important principle is involved and the verdict is to be followed by serious consequences to the party against whom it is found, it becomes the imperative duty of the corrective Court to interfere and to grant a new trial, just as often as the law is disregarded.

What were the issues of fact involved in the trial before the [196]*196magistrates? First, the possession of Chambers, about which there was no controversy. Secondly, his forcible eviction, which was put beyond dispute by the evidence of Daniel, the Deputy Sheriff, who officiated on the occasion. "We hold, with the plaintiff’s counsel, that to constitute a forcible entry and detainer, there need be only such number of persons or show of force as is calculated to deter the rightful owner from undertaking to send them away or retain his possession, and that he need not wait till he is actually assaulted. Milner vs. McLean, 12 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 5. Indeed the only fact submitted to the jury, abottt which there, was any contradiction, was as to the terms of the agreement made subsequently to the sale between McDowell and Chambers. If the testimony on the part of Chambers was true, the fi.fa. was discharged by the notes of himself and his sureties, given on the 3d of June, 1843, and there was an end to all farther proceedings under it. It was functus officio, and the conduct of the Deputy Sheriff and his posse was clearly a trespass.

Admit, however, that the jury rejected this evidence altogeth-. er. How stands the case, as proven by McDowell’s witnesses ? That Chambers was permitted to redeem his land; that the three, notes were given as collateral security only for the execution; that Chambers was to have a deed whenever the notes were paid, and the fi.fa. to be satisfied; the contract to be at an end, provided the notes were not punctually paid, and in the meantime Cham-, bers to remain on the land. This privilege resulted necessarily from the character of the contract. It is an irresistible inference, independent of the proof.

[2,] I ask, after this agreement, had McDowell or his vendee, Collier, the statutory right to be put in possession by the Sheriff by virtue of a sale made two years and eight months previously ? The Act of 1823 to compel Sheriffs and Coroners to deliver possession of real estate, sold by them under execution, to the purchaser, declares that “When any Sheriff or Coroner shall sell any real estate by virtue of and under the authority of an execution, it shall be the duty of such Sheriff or Coroner, (as the case may be,) upon application to put the purchaser, his or her agent or attorney, in possession of the real estate sold; provided, that this Act shall not authorize

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ga. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-collier-ga-1848.