Richards v. Edwardy

76 S.E. 64, 138 Ga. 690, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 658
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 64 (Richards v. Edwardy) 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
Richards v. Edwardy, 76 S.E. 64, 138 Ga. 690, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 658 (Ga. 1912).

Opinion

Beck, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) These cases have been considered and decided together, inasmuch as the facts relating to the main question in each case are the same.

[694]*6941. The question of primary importance is as to whether the ■sales of the property in controversy by the sheriff, in April and May, 1872, were void or not. Independently of the question whether the description of the property levied upon by virtue of the execution under which the sale took place was sufficient, under the admitted facts and the law applicable thereto, we are clearly of the opinion that the sale of lots 3 and 4, as designated in a survey known as the Wallace & Fowler survey, was void. This is the property involved in the controversy in the case of Eichards et al. v. Edwardy. As appears from the statement of facts, when lots 3 and 4 were sold to W. L. Hubbard and E. Y. Clarke respectively, the fi. fa. of Lowenthal v. Massey, administrator, had been paid off and 'satisfied. It was functus officio. At the sheriff’s sale in April, 1872, under this fi. fa., the sheriff had sold lots 5 to 14 inclusive, for the sum of $848, which was largely in excess of the amount'due upon the Lowenthal fi. fa. for principal, interest and costs. The sheriff’s sole authority for selling any of the land involved in this controversy was the fi. fa. in favor of Lowenthal against Massey, administrator. Whether other fi. fas. had been placed in his hands for collection or not does not appear in the record, and does not matter; for the only fi. fa. which had been levied was the one named above. Except under and by virtue of this fi. fa., the levy thereof, and the advertisement in pursuance of the levy, the sheriff was without authority to offer any of this land for sale; and immediately upon a sale of a sufficiency of the property to satisfy the principal, interest, and costs of that fi. fa., the fi. fa. itself ceased to have vital force and the sheriff’s authority to seize or sell under and by virtue of that fi. fa. was completely extinguished. If the sums of $155 paid for lot No. 2, and $848 paid for lots Nos. 5 to Í4- inclusive, which were paid to the sheriff, had not been applied to the fi. fa. under which the sale took place, but had been applied to the payment of other claims of superior dignity, this should have been shown; and in the absence of proof tending to show that they had been otherwise applied than to the extinguishment of the fi. fa. under which the sale took place, the presumption is that these sums were applied to the Lowenthal fi. fa. and that it was no longer of force. “Where an execution is levied upon the property of the defendant, and at a sale had in pursuance of the levy the property brings a sum equal to or greater [695]*695than the amount due upon the execution, such sale satisfies the judgment, and the process is thenceforth functus officio, whether marked satisfied or not.” Jinks v. American Mortgage Co., 102 Ga. 694 (28 S. E. 609). “The innocent purchaser is bound only to see that the officer has competent authority to sell, and that he is apparently proceeding to sell under the prescribed forms.” Code, § 6059. “It imposes no onerous duty on purchasers, to inspect the writ of fieri facias to see that it is in due and proper form, and with all legal requisites, as to entries and returns.” Hamilton v. Moreland, 15 Ga. 343. In the case of Carithers v. Venable, 52 Ga. 389, it appears that Delila M. Venable brought ejectment against E. T. Carithers. The plaintiff relied for title on a decree of the superior court in an action of divorce, decreeing to her and her minor children a certain house and lot. Title in John Venable, the husband of the plaintiff, was admitted by the defendant; but he set up, as showing title in himself, that one Thompson obtained a judgment against John Venable in the county court of Jackson county for the principal sum of $383, and that under a fi. fa. issued upon said judgment, Hunter, sheriff of the county, levied on the house and lot and sold said property to the highest bidder, and said Thompson purchased the same, and a deed was made accordingly. The judgment was subsequent to a decree of divorce, but based upon a debt of a date anterior to the decree in the divorce case. Thompson conveyed the property to his wife, Mary Thompson, and she, through her agent, four years later conveyed to defendant. The fi. fa. appeared on its face to be a general execution, but it was shown by proof to have been a fi. fa. based on a judgment obtained in a suit commenced by attachment, and that there had been no service or notice to the defendant in the attachment proceeding, so as to give the judgment efficacy as a general judgment in personam. It was held in that case, that the purchaser, Carithers, the defendant in the ejectment suit, was not protected, and the absence of authority to enforce the execution as one based upon a general judgment, though the fi. fa. was apparently general, was more than a mere irregularity; that if there was no notice to the defendant in the attachment, the judgment was void and the sale under the execution issued on the judgment was void, and that the purchaser took nothing. In the case at bar the fi. fa., under and by virtue of [696]*696which the sale took place at which Clarke and Hnbbard, who are the predecessors in title of the defendants, Richards et al., bought the property in controversy, had upon it an entry showing levy, not only upon lots 3 and 4, but also upon lot 2 and lots 5 to 14-inelusive, which were sold at the sheriff’s sale in April, 1872, and presumably an entry showing the sale of those lots and the price at which they were sold. If Clarke and Hubbard, the purchasers of lots 3 and 4, had looked at the fi. fa., they would have known that it had been satisfied and the sheriff no longer had any authority to sell the lots which they were purchasing, and they derived no more title through a sale by him of these lots than if he had personally sold the lots to them without reference to the office of sheriff. Hubbard and Clarke, having obtained no title by virtue of the sale, could transmit none.

Now, coming to. the consideration of the property which the plaintiff seeks to recover in the suit against Farlinger, it is apparent that Farlinger relies upon a title infected with a weakness that is fatal to it and renders it void. The sheriff’s deed to Alexander and Wallace, through whom Farlinger derives title, was void and ineffectual to convey title, on the ground that the levy was excessive, which, as a fact, the judge, to whom the entire case was submitted without the intervention of a jury, was authorized by the evidence to find, and that the sheriff did not offer to sell by lots, although the tract of land had already been subdivided into lots, but sold the tract in mass. It is apparent that the sale of all of these lots was not necessary to sátisfy the fi. fa., and two of the lots, 13 and 14, were not even contiguous to the tract of land containing lots 5 to 12, but were on the opposite side of the street designated as Rolling Mill Street. In the case of Forbes v. Hall, 102 Ga. 47 (28 S. E. 915, 66 Am. St. R. 152), where the plaintiff, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 64, 138 Ga. 690, 1912 Ga. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-edwardy-ga-1912.