First State Bank v. Carver

36 S.E. 960, 111 Ga. 876, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 876
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 9, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 S.E. 960 (First State Bank v. Carver) 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
First State Bank v. Carver, 36 S.E. 960, 111 Ga. 876, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 876 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Fish, J.

1. When two fi. fas. in favorof the same plaintiff were levied upon realty which was claimed by a third person under a deed from the defendant in execution, of older date than the plaintiff’s judgments, and before the trial of the claim case the plaintiff filed an equitable amendment in aid of his levies, to which there was no demurrer and upon which the parties went to trial and in the course thereof really contested over only two issues, viz.: (1) whether the deed under which the claimant asserted title was one of bargain and sale, or had merely been given to secure a debt, and (2), if the latter, what was the amount of that debt, the plaintiff in the amendment referred to conceding the priority of this [877]*877debt over his executions, and praying that the property he sold under his fi. fas. and that out of the proceeds thereof the amount due to the claimant should be first paid : Held, (a) that a refusal to dismiss one of the levies, even if based on a good ground, resulted in no injury to the plaintiff; (6) that, in such a case, giving a charge which restricted the verdict to be rendered by the jury to a mere general finding as to whether or not the property was subject, was an error requiring a new trial ; (c) ' that a verdict rendered on such a trial, which simply found that the property levied upon was subject, without more, did not cover the issues submitted.

Argued July 25, — Decided August 9, 1900. Levy and claim. Before Judge Sheffield. Terrell superior court. December 2, 1899. M. C. Edwards, Jr., and J. G. Parks, by Hoke Smith & H. G. Peeples, for plaintiff !n error. Worrill & Laing, contra.

2. That a judgment does not follow, or is not authorized by, the verdict upon which it is entered, is not a good ground of a motion for a new trial.

'3. On the trial of a claim case, wherein a corporation was the claimant, a memorandum in the form of a written statement, in reference to a question involved in the case, made and delivered to the plaintiff in execution by a person not shown to have.been an officer, oran authorized agent, of the corporation at the time the memorandum was .made and delivered, was not admissible in evidence, over the objection of the claimant.

4. When the value of given realty at a specified date wasamaterial inquiry, there was no error in rejecting evidence tending to show what it brought at a public sale had several years thereafter.

Judgment reversed.

AU the Justices concurring.

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Related

Smith v. Wood
7 S.E.2d 255 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1940)
Robertson v. Aycock
153 S.E. 213 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1930)
Potts v. City of Atlanta
79 S.E. 110 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1913)
Ford v. Holloway
38 S.E. 373 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E. 960, 111 Ga. 876, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-v-carver-ga-1900.