Southern Oldsmobile Co. v. Baker
This text of 103 S.E. 826 (Southern Oldsmobile Co. v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The Southern Oldsmobile Company foreclosed against Mrs. Annie Baker, as administratrix of George D. Baker, deceased, its mortgage on a certain automobile, executed by the decedent to secure a debt of $1,050, “for value received.” The entry of levy recites that the property was “found in the possession of Mrs. Annie Baker.” A statutory claim was interposed by Mrs. Baker, denying that the automobile was the property of the estate of her deceased husband, George D. Baker, and asserting that it was her own individual property. Upon the trial the judge directed a verdict finding the property not subject to the mortgage fi. fa. The plaintiff thereupon moved for a new trial, which was overruled, and it excepted.
By section 4043 of the Civil Code (1910) it is required that, upon the “filing of the return of appraisers setting apart a year’s support, “the ordinary shall . . publish notice as required in the appointment of permanent administrators.” By section 3970, with reference to permanent administrators, it is provided that “The ordinary must issue a citation, giving notice of the application to all concerned, in the gazette in which the county advertisements are usually published, once a week for four weeks.” In so far as the publication of notice is concerned, the sole requirement of section 4043 therefore is publication “ once a. week for four weeks.” In Bentley v. Shingler, 111 Ga. 780 (2) (36 S. E. 935), the Supreme Court, in dealing with the same expression in a different statute, but upon substantially similar facts, held: “A statutory requirement that a given advertisement shall be published in a designated newspaper ‘once a week for four weeks,’ before a particular thing can lawfully be done, is complied with if the advertisement be inserted in that paper four times, in as many separate, consecutive weeks, and the first insertion is made in an issue of the paper published twenty-eight or more days before the thing in question is done.” Under that decision the excluded evidence, even if it had been admitted, could have served no lawful purpose. It could have shown only that the notice was not published in the last of five weeks in which it might have been published, and would not [583]*583even have tended to contradict the recital in the judgment that it had been published as required by law. But it is insisted that the language of section 6063 of the Civil Code (1910) makes it necessary for the advertisement to run during the four weeks “immediately preceding the term or day when the order is to be granted.” A sufficient reply to this contention is that the purpose of the provisions of section 6063 was to relax, and not to increase, the stringency of the provisions of the older sections of the code to which section 6063 relates. While this section expressly declares that publication during the last four weeks “shall be sufficient,” yet it nowhere declares, either expressly or by necessary implication, that the first four out df five preceding weeks shall be insufficient. Furthermore, on leaving the letter of the. law and looking to its practical application, to advertise during the first four rather than the last four weeks of a given five-weeks period would seem to be to the advantage of none but those who would resist the thing contemplated, in that it gives them one week more in which to prepare to resist the object of the person causing the notice to be given. We think, therefore, that the complaint is wholly without merit.
Judgment affirmed,
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
103 S.E. 826, 25 Ga. App. 580, 1920 Ga. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-oldsmobile-co-v-baker-gactapp-1920.