Ezzard v. Bell

28 S.E. 28, 100 Ga. 150
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 21, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 28 S.E. 28 (Ezzard v. Bell) 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
Ezzard v. Bell, 28 S.E. 28, 100 Ga. 150 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Atkinson, Justice.

An execution was issued upon a judgment rendered against a principal and his surety. It was levied upon property of the surety, which was sold, and the proceeds of the' sale applied to the payment of the execution. The levy, the fact of the sale of the surety’s property, and the fact of the appropriation of the proceeds to the payment of the debt of the plaintiff, were all entered by the levying officer - upon the back of the execution. Subsequently the administrator upon the estate of the surety caused the execution to • be levied on certain property as 'the- property of the principal, for the purpose of reimbursing himself. To the prop- • erty thus levied upon a claim was filed by a third person,. [151]*151and when the claim case came on to be tried, and the surety offered in evidence the execution which was proceeding for his benefit, the claimant objected upon the ground that the execution was functus officio, it having been fully satisfied by the sale of the surety’s property. The court sustained this objection, excluded the .execution, ¡and then dismissed the levy. To- this ruling the surety excepted; and we are now to- inquire whether this ruling of the court should be sustained.

It will be conceded, in the absence of a statutory provision to the contrary, that upon the payment by -a surety of an execution against his principal, such execution becomes functus officio, and is not capable of subsequent enforcement by 'the surety. Section 2986 of the Civil-Code is relied upon to falce the present case out of the operation of the general rule. It provides that, “Any surety on the original contract, or on stay of execution, or on appeal, or in any other way, or the representative of -a deceased surety, who shall have paid off or discharged 'the judgment 'or -execution in whole or in part, -and shall have the fact of such payment by him entered on such execution, by the plaintiff or his attorney, or the -collecting -officer, shall have -the control of such execution, and the judgment upon which it is founded, to- the-same- extent as if he was the original plaintiff therein, and be subrogated to all the rights of such plaintiff, for the- purpose of reimbursing himself from his principal.”

It was -earnestly argued by the learned counsel who appeared for the defendant in error, -that -the section of the code above quoted could not be applied to the present case, for the reason, that the words, “who- shall have paid off or discharged the judgment,” as employed in that section, could have application only to those persons who had voi■mfct/rily paid off or discharged the judgment, and could not be- extended to- one whose property under such, execution had been appropriated to- ’the payment of the princi[152]*152pal’s debt. In determining tire true significance of these words, it will be helpful to 'look 'to the course of legislation, which found its last expression in the section of the code we have now under review.

As early as the year 1810, the General Assembly passed an act providing that when it should appear by the sheriff’s return on any execution or executions that the same “has been paid” by a security or securities, it shall be the duty of ’the clerk to make an entry of that fact on the docket book, and that thereupon tire security or securities should have the control of the execution for the purpose of reimbursement. (Cobb’s Digest, p. 592.) This was followed by an act passed in the year 1826 (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 593). This act provided that where a security on appeal, or for stay of execution, had subsequently thereto “paid off and discharged” the execution issuing in such case, that fact being entered upon the back of tire execution by the officer executing the process, this alone entitled tire surety to the use and control of the execution. The second section of the same act provided that on appeal trials judgment should be entered against the principal 'and surety both, but provided that if the execution against the security or securities be first “paid” by him, he should in like manner control it. So a similar provision was made in cases where one was surety on a stay of execution after judgment.

In section 5 of the same act (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 594) it was provided that in all oases in which any person or persons had heretofore become security, and judgment had been rendered against him or them, and execution had been issued accordingly, in which they were able to show that they were securities only, and as such had “paid off and discharged” the execution, they were entitled to control it.

On December 26th, 1831 (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 595), the General Assembly passed another act to alter and amend the act defining the liability of securities on appeal, and by which it was provided, that from and after the pas[153]*153sage of that act should any person or persons theretofore have become security on any note, bond or other contract, and not interested in the consideration thereof, and judgment had been rendered against them and execution issued .accordingly, and such security or securities had been theretofore “compelled to pay off such judgment or execution,” in that event such security should be entitled to control the same for the purpose of remunerating himself out of the property of the principal.

In the year 1840, by an act approved December 22d, of •that year (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 597), the General Assembly provided, that from and immediately after the passage of that act, any security (who may be sued together with other securities) who “shall pay or discharge” any execution, should be entitled to control the same against his cosureties for contribution.

And by the act approved December 27th, 1845 (see ■Cobb’s Digest, p. 598), it was provided, that from and immediately after the passage of that act, it shall or may be lawful for any person or persons who have heretofore become security on any note, bond or other instrument in writing and not interested in the consideration, and judgment has been rendered against them, and such security or ¡securities have been heretofore “compelled to pay off. such judgment,” to control the same in as full and ample a manner as the party plaintiff could have done against his principal debtor or debtors.

So, by an act approved February 8th, 1859 (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 599), it was provided, that where a surety had •omitted to sign his name as such, and had also neglected to make a special defense at the trial, showing him to be a ■security on the original contract, and judgment had gone against him, it was still competent for such a surety who may be “compelled to pay off” the same, to control the execution for contribution. The word “compelled” is likewise used in the second section of the same act.

[154]*154So the legislature, by an act approved December 14th,. 1811 (see Cobb’s Digest, p. 645), provided with reference-to executions issued from justice’s courts, that when an execution issued upon a judgment rendered in a justice’s court “has been paid” by a security or securities, it should be the duty of the magistrate to enter that fact upon the docket book, and thereupon the security had the right to control the execution for the purpose of reimbursement.

By an act approved December 12th, 1816 (see Cobb’s-Digest, p.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 28, 100 Ga. 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ezzard-v-bell-ga-1897.