Jefferson v. Hartley
This text of 9 S.E. 174 (Jefferson v. Hartley) 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
This was an action upon the sheriff’s bond, brought by a woman who alleged that the sheriff, when executing a writ of possession against her husband, expelled her from certain land, she having title to the same, and not having been a party to the ejectment cause against her husband, out of which the writ issued. The declaration was demurred to, upon the ground that an action upon the bond would not lie in the first instance; that the sheriff had to be first sued and a recovery had against him. The demurrer was sustained and the action dismissed.
The case was argued here for the plaintiff in error alone, there being no appearance for the defendants in error. So we have not had the benefit of representation on both sides, and we confine our adjudication to the exact point made by the demurrer, not investigating carefully the allegations of the declaration so as to see whether all the elements of a good action are set out. The demurrer being confined to a single point, our judgment is restricted accordingly. We however say, upon the general question of a right of action by one turned out of possession who is not named in the writ nor within its legal operation, the right certainly exists. |f the sheriff, in endeavoring to execute a writ of possession, expels from the premises any such person, the person expelled would have a cause of action. As to who will come within the operation of the writ, there may be some question. Section 3638 of the code deals with the matter in a general way, and some adjudications have been had, as for instance, Rodgers vs. Bell, 53 Ga. 94, and Stokes vs. Morrow, 54 Ga. 597, throwing light upon the subject'.
We are not to be understood as doubting that a husband can be removed from specific realty by a writ of [718]*718•possession against him, though the land may belong to his wife. What we suggest is, that the wife cannot be removed from her own land by virtue of a writ to which she is no party, unless by reason of the special facts of the case, she falls within some class of persons against whom the writ- silently operates by the rules of law. Here the wife sues, not for the removal of her husband, but of herself. She raises,no question as to the legality of his removal. Of course, when the sheriff has an express order from a court of competent jurisdiction to expel a particular person, or when the law points out a class of persons to be expelled, he commits no tort by obeying the writ, and is protected. This principle, as it affects the seizure of property, is ruled in Buck vs. Colbath, 3 Wall. 334, in Wallace vs. Holly, 13 Ga. 394, and in Chipstead vs. Porter, 63 Ga. 220.
Judgment reversed.
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9 S.E. 174, 81 Ga. 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-v-hartley-ga-1889.