Johnson v. Reese

31 Ga. 601
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 Ga. 601 (Johnson v. Reese) 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
Johnson v. Reese, 31 Ga. 601 (Ga. 1860).

Opinion

By the Court.

Eyon, J.,

delivering the opinion.

The defendant, as sheriff of the county of Glascock, [603]*603seized and sold a tract of land, as the property of the plaintiff, under execution, but failed to advertise the sale in three of the most public places in the county, as required.by the Judiciary Act of 1799. (Cobb's Dig. 509.) This action was brought by the plaintiff, against the defendant, to recover damages sustained by means of such neglect of duty. On the hearing, the Court below awarded a nonsuit, to which plaintiff excepted. And the only question for our consideration is, whether the provision of the Act of 1799, referred to above, has been repealed by subsequent legislation, either expressly or by implication? If it has, then the judgment of nonsuit was properly awarded; if not, the judgment was erroneous.

PREAMBLE OF ACT. “While the preamble is not, strictly speaking, any part of the Act itself, yet where the body of an Act is ambiguous or uncertain, resort may be hart to its preamble for the purpose of ascertaining the legislative intent. Eastman v. McAlpin, 1 Ga. 157; Price v. Bradford, 5 Ga. 370; Johnson v. Reese, 31 Ga. 605.” Smith v. Evans, 125 Ga. 112.

[603]*603It is conceded that the identical question made in this case, was fully discussed, and actually decided, by this Court in Johnson vs. Reese (same parties, though a different case), 28 Ga. 355; but it is urged by counsel that, while this is true, the question made here now was not really in that case, or rather the judgment of the Court there did not at all depend on this question. And we agree with the counsel, that the real question in that case — which was, whether the purchaser, at the sale, got a title to the land or not — had nothing to do with the adjudication of the one before us now, and the adjudication of this, at that time, was unnecessary, and really not before the Court. Hence, we do not fell concluded by it, but shall decide the question precisely as if it was made now for the first time.

The provision of the Act of 1799, on which this action is-founded, is in the following words:

“No sales in future shall be made by the sheriff of property taken under execution, but on the first Tuesday in each month, and between the' hours of ten and three in the day; and it shall be the duty of the sheriff to give thirty days’ notice in one of the public gazettes of the State of all sales of land and other property executed by him, and also advertise the same-in three of the most public places in the county where such sales are to be made, and shall give a full and complete description of the property to be sold,” etc.

The Act of 1839 (Cobb, 286) requires the sheriff and other officers to keep in their respective offices a regular file of the newspaper in which they may advertise the notices required by law to be advertised, but no change of advertising is made.

[604]*604The next Act on the subject to which we are referred, is an Act, entitled, “An Act to authorize and require the sheriff, etc., to advertise in certain newspapers.” Approved February-22, 1850, by which it is enacted:

“That the sheriffs, etc., are hereby authorized and required to advertise their sales, etc., in some newspaper published in their counties respectively; and if there be no such paper published in the county, then in the nearest newspaper having the largest, or a general circulation in the county.”

By the Act of 1799, the sheriff was required to give thirty • days’ notice in some public gazette of the State. The sheriff, by that Act, could have complied with the law by a publication of his sales in any newspaper of the State, whether a single copy was taken in the county or not. The object of the advertisement was to give publicity to the sale, so that the competition might be as large as possible, they benefiting both the debtor and creditor in the sale of the property. The provision of the Act of 1799 did not accomplish that object, or at least it might be complied with by the sheriff, and the object of the law not attained. The Act of 1850 was intended to remedy that defect, and the only change made by that Act was as to the newspaper in which the notice was to be given, all the other provisions of the Act remaining of force.

The next Act on this subject, and the one which is relied on by counsel for defendant, as repealing, by implication, the provisions of the Act of 1799, requiring advertisements at the three most public places in the county, is that of 1852, entitled, “An Act to regulate the advertising of Clerks, Sheriffs and other State and county officers,” etc.' Approved January 22, 1852.

Section x enacts: “That from and after the passage of this Act, the clerks, sheriffs and other State and. county officers of the State of Georgia shall be authorized and empowered to publish their advertisements in any newspaper they may select, having a general circulation in their respective counties or districts.”

Section 2, general repealing clause. ’

The only effect of this Act was, to repeal the provision of the Act of 1850, that required the advertisements to be made in a newspaper published in the county where the sale was to be made, or in the nearest having the largest, or gen[605]*605eral circulation in the county, and instead thereof, to authorize the officers to advertise in any paper they might select, restricting them only to some paper that had a general circulation in the county where the sales were to be made. The Act did not repeal the provisions of the Act of 1799, requiring the sale to be advertised at three of the most public places in the county, nor in anywise dispense with or abrogate that duty on the part of the sheriff, nor are those provisions in conflict or inconsistent with the terms of the Act of 1852; but they are in as full fprce and as binding on the sheriff, as a duty, as if no such Act had been passed.

Great stress was laid, in the argument, on the fact, that the title of the Act of 1852 is, “to regulate the advertising of clerks and sheriffs,” from which, as argued, appears the intention of the Legislature as to the whole duty of those officers in advertisements; that in regulating the advertisement, they then prescribe all the duties required of the officer in this respect; in other words, as the Legislature, by that Act, regulated 'the duty of. sheriffs, in advertising their sales, a compliance with the provisions of that Act is a full performance of their whole duty in that respect; and all Acts requiring other' or additional duties, conflict with that Act, and are void.

The answer to the argument is, that the title is no part of the Act, and resort can be had to it only for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the Legislature where the body of the Act itself is so obscure and • uncertain that the intention can not be ascertained from it. In the body of this Act there is no obscurity or ambiguity whatever, but the sense is plain and manifest, that the only change made or intended upon the old law, was as to' the newspaper in which the notice of the sale was to be made. But let us look at the word as though it constituted a part of the body of the Act, and is to be considered as 'well as all the balance of the Act, to get at the sense of the Legislature.

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Bentley v. State Board of Medical Examiners
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Bluebook (online)
31 Ga. 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-reese-ga-1860.