Howland v. Donehoo

82 S.E. 32, 141 Ga. 687, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 32 (Howland v. Donehoo) 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
Howland v. Donehoo, 82 S.E. 32, 141 Ga. 687, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 119 (Ga. 1914).

Opinion

Fish, C. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) In their brief filed in this court counsel for plaintiff in error say: “The petition alleged, as grounds for setting aside this deed and sale, (1) that the levy was excessive; (2) that the price was grossly inadequate; and (3) that the defendant in fi. fa., before the sale of said property, filed with the sheriff’s office an affidavit of illegality, which was accepted by the sheriff’s office, and thereupon the defendant in fi. fa., naturally supposing that the said sale would be postponed until a hearing could be had upon this affidavit, went away from the place of sale, and that later the attorney for the Exchange Bank, without the knowledge of Mrs. Howland or her attorney, conferred with the sheriff and they thereupon made certain private investigations and finally set aside the illegality and sold the property without notifying or attempting to notify either Mrs. Howland or her attorney.” We will deal with the points insisted on in the brief in the order there stated.

1. Was the levy excessive? Counsel contend in their brief that the mortgaged property was susceptible of subdivision, so as to sell a less quantity than the whole, and thereby raise a sum sufficient to satisfy the mortgage fi. fa.; and therefore that the sale of the entire property was not lawful and should be set aside. We will consider these two points in this division of the opinion. In [691]*691Vickers v. Hawkins, 111 Ga. 119, 120 (36 S. E. 463), it was said: “that an execution in rem against certain specific property may properly be levied upon that property, and that the levy will not be void for exeessiveness though the value of the property be far greater than the amount of the execution. We therefore think that where a tax execution is issued against a particular lot of land, commanding the levying officer to levy upon and sell that lot, a levy ■of the execution upon the entire lot is not excessive.” This ruling was followed in Wilkinson v. Holton, 119 Ga. 557 (3), 558 (46 S. E. 620), where a security deed had been given by the debtor to his creditor and judgment obtained for the indebtedness, and an execution issued thereon had been levied on the entire land conveyed in the deed. In the case last cited it was said that “where the property is easily susceptible of division, it would be the duty of the sheriff to expose it for sale in parcels in such a way as to discharge the amount due on the executions with as little loss to the plaintiff in the present ease as possible.” It will, however, clearly appear from an examination of that case that what was said in respect of the sale, in parcels, of property levied on under the execution there involved, where it is susceptible of subdivision, was purely obiter. See also Cooney v. City of Atlanta, 136 Ga. 118 (3), 120 (70 S. E. 950), where-the fi. fa. apparently directed the marshal to sell so much of the property described as might be necessary .to make the amount of an assessment for a local improvement, and the marshal, in his answer to a petition for injunction, disclaimed any intention to sell in bulk rather than in parcels. Without discussing what may be the rule in eases of executions in rem for taxes or for assessments for local improvements, we know of no ease, where the question was in issue, holding that where a mortgage execution has been levied on the entire property described in the mortgage, judgment of foreclosure, and execution, it must be sold in parcels when susceptible of subdivision. In other eases cited by counsel for plaintiff in error, .the executions there involved were not against specific property, but were against the defendants generally. In Reeves v. Bolles, 95 Ga. 402 (22 S. E. 626), a borrower of money secured the same by a deed to a large tract of land to the lender, judgment was obtained for the money loaned, and execution was levied upon the entire tract of land. The defendant in fi. fa., and certain persons [692]*692as his judgment creditors, filed an equitable petition to enjoin the sale, and prayed that the land be surveyed, platted, and sold in separate parcels. The petitioners alleged that if the land should be sold in one entire tract, it would bring a much less sum than if the same were sold in parcels, and would therefore be sacrificed unless the defendants were enjoined from making the sale as advertised, that is, to be sold in gross. The trial judge refused to grant the injunction, and upon a writ of error to this court his judgment was affirmed. There was a conflict in the evidence submitted, as to whether or not the land would sell to better advantage if divided up into parcels than it would if sold as one entire tract. In the opinion, pronounced by Mr. Justice Samuel Lumpkin in behalf of the court, it was said: "This [conflict in the evidence],, of itself, would be a sufficient reason for declining to interfere with the discretion of the trial judge in refusing by injunction to arrest the progress of the defendant’s execution.” The decision, however, was not left to stand on this ground alone, for it was said: "Granting, however, for the sake of the argument, that a larger amount would be realized by selling the plaintiff’s land in separate-tracts, we are still of the opinion that the judge was right in denying the injunction. It may be within the power of a court of equity, in some cases, to decree that the property of a debtor shall be sold in parcels, and not as a whole, where it manifestly appears that gross injustice would result if the latter course were-pursued. We are entirely satisfied, however, that the ease in hand is not one of this kind. The plaintiff, Reeves, borrowed money, gave his note for the same, 'and for the purpose of securing its repayment executed a deed conveying the entire body of land in controversy. This gave to the lender an absolute legal right to enforce the collection of any judgment he might obtain upon the note-by a sale of the land as one entire tract; . . The land in its entirety being specifically pledged for the payment of the debt, it-must inevitably have been within the contemplation of the parties that if it should become necessary to enforce payment by resort to legal proceedings, the land would.be subject to sale as a whole, just as it was conveyed. It is not denied that the plaintiff in execution has a perfect legal right to have all the land sold to satisfy his judgment; and to have granted the injunction sought would necessarily have been to interfere, to some extent, with the exercise of [693]*693this right.” A judgment of foreclosure óf a mortgage on realty is in the nature of a judgment in rem. “It is a judgment to enforce a specific lien, created by agreement of the parties. It is not alone a judgment as to the amount due on the mortgage, but is also a judgment that the property mortgaged shall be sold to pay the sum adjudged^ to be due.” In pursuance of the judgment ■of foreclosure an execution is issued “commanding the officer to levy upon and sell the property, naming it specifically. What right of judgment or discretion has he ? His duty is to levy the process, and the process commands him to levy upon and sell the property, designating it by full description. He is not directed to raise money, as in case of a general judgment, out, of the property of the defendant, but to raise it out of the property named.” Wallace v. Holly, 13 Ga. 389, 393, 394 (58 Am. D. 518).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 32, 141 Ga. 687, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howland-v-donehoo-ga-1914.