Sigman v. Treadwell
This text of 29 S.E. 761 (Sigman v. Treadwell) 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
Treadwell brought suits against Sigman and his •wife upon certain promissory notes given by them jointly, in [767]*767which they waived all right to homestead and exemption. To these suits the defendants filed pleas of the general issue, usury, and that the claim sued upon was the husband’s debt for which the wife was not liable. At the trial term of the case, as the result of a compromise agreed upon between the parties, a consent verdict was had for an amount less than that claimed in the suit, falling due at times subsequent to the date of this verdict, in three different instalments. Upon the judgment entered on this verdict a fi. fa. was issued, and after the first instalment became due, it was levied upon certain personalty as the property of the defendants. Sigman, as the head of a family, had this property exempted under the homestead and exemption laws of the State, upon an application made by him to the ordinary after the rendition of the judgment, and he filed his affidavit of illegality to the levy, claiming that the fi. fa. was proceeding against him illegally on account of said exemption. The jury returned a verdict against the illegality, finding the property subject. Whereupon Sigman moved for a new trial, on the -ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence; and on the further ground that the court erred in refusing to dismiss the levy and awarding a non-suit as to his wife, Mrs. E. S. Sigman, the levy failing to state what interest she had in the property, and the evidence failing to show possession or title in her. The motion also contained the ground that the verdict finding the corn levied on subject was especially contrary to the evidence. The motion was overruled by the court, on condition that so much of the verdict and judgment as found the corn subject be written off; which was accordingly done by counsel for plaintiff in fi. fa. To this judgment overruling the motion plaintiff in error excepts.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
29 S.E. 761, 102 Ga. 766, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sigman-v-treadwell-ga-1897.