Hendrick v. Davis
This text of 27 Ga. 167 (Hendrick v. Davis) 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..
The defendant in the Court below, who is the plaintiff in error here, was sued by the Sheriff, for the use of Lodwick [170]*170E. Lard, to recover the difference between the price at which the defendant had bid off certain property at Sheriff’s sale, he having refused to comply with the terms of sale when required to do so, and the price at which the property was afterwards sold. The suit was brought under the Act of 1831. Cobb, 513.
The defendant’s counsel moved to withdraw from the jury, the levy upon the fi. fa. in favor of E. H. Martin vs. L. E. [171]*171Lard and M. D. Hendrick, makers, and Thomas Douglass and William T. Callier, endorsers, deciding that said levy on said fi. fa. authorized the Sheriff to make sale of the one-third interest of either of the said defendants separately, in and to the property levied on. Error is assigned on this decision. In determining this assignment of error, we refer to the principles upon which the plaintiff’s suit depends. The plaintiff in error had purchased, at the Sheriff’s sale, the interest of two of the defendants in the third part of the property sold. He bid it off at $1,810. He refused to comply with the terms. The property was advertised subsequently, and sold for $1,000, as the property ofLodwick E, Lard only. For Hendrick to be liable, the same property must have been resold, and resold as the property of the identical defendants as whose property it had been bid off by him. If it had been offered the second time as the property of both defendants, and especially if each owned a third, who can say that the property would not have sold for the amount of Hendrick’s bid ? The decision of the Court must be construed to mean, that notwithstanding the Sheriff offered for sale the interest of two defendants, and it was bid off by Hendrick, he, not having complied with the terms of sale, must be held liable for the difference between his bid and the price at which it was sold at the second sale as the property of one defendant only, inasmuch as the Sheriff was authorized by the levy to make sale of the one-third interest of either of the defendants separately, in the property levied on. The question in the case was not on the authority of the Sheriff to sell, but upon the liability oí the defendant below to respond for the difference between his bid and the price of the second sale, when he had bid off the interest of two of the defendants, and the subsequent sale was of the interest of one only. The decision was wrong in reference to the facts of this case, and the law of the defendant’s liability.
A matter appears in the record, but on which no point seems to have been made in the Court below, and there has [172]*172been no allusion to it here. The plaintiff in error, as repeatedly already remarked, bid off the interest of two of the defendants in the property offered for sale; when the Sheriff demanded of him a compliance with the terms of sale, he tendered a a deed conveying the interest of one of them only.
We reverse the judgment on the fourth assignment of error appearing in the record, for the reasons stated.
Judgment reversed.
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27 Ga. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendrick-v-davis-ga-1859.