Stroud v. Hancock

42 S.E. 496, 116 Ga. 332, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 9, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 496 (Stroud v. Hancock) 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
Stroud v. Hancock, 42 S.E. 496, 116 Ga. 332, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 97 (Ga. 1902).

Opinion

Fish, J.

Jack Hancock, sheriff of Crawford county, brought-suit against Mrs. Stroud, widow and executrix of J. W. Stroud,, making by his petition substantially the following case: In October, 1897, Napier Brothers foreclosed in the superior court of Pike-county a mortgage on personalty against A. O. Simmons, and petitioner as sheriff duly levied on the property in Crawford county.. Simmons filed an affidavit of illegality to the mortgage foreclosure,, and gave a bond for the forthcoming of the property, signed by himself as principal and J. W. Stroud as surety. On the trial of the issue formed on the affidavit, the illegality was dismissed and judgment was rendered in favor of Napier Brothers for damages. The property was then duly advertised for sale, in the paper in which the sheriff’s advertisements are published, and when the day of sale arrived the sheriff, during the legal hours and at the legal place of sale, called for the property, and it was not forthcoming. By reason of the breach of the forthcoming bond, petitioner was damaged in a named sum, for which he prayed judgment. To this petition the defendant filed a general demurrer, which was overruled. She also filed a plea, in which she averred that for want of sufficient information she was unable to either admit or deny the' allegations of the petition with reference to the foreclosure of the' mortgage and the filing and trial of the affidavit of illegality, hut-denied that any levy had ever been made upon the property described in the petition, and claimed that she, as executrix of her husband, had never been notified to produce the property at the-time and place of sale, and had no notice that J. W. Stroud had ever signed such a bond as the one sued on until after his death and long after the time when the property was advertised for sale. The sixth paragraph of the petition averred “that it was impossi- [334]*334' ble for J. W. Stroud to produce said property at [the] time and place of sale, as J. W. Stroud was dead, and it was also impossible for her to produce said property, not having received any notice to produce same on said first Tuesday in November, 1898; . . that the property mortgaged to Napier Bros, by A. G.. Simmons, and which it is alleged in plaintiff’s petition was levied on by Jack Hancock, sheriff, was not the property of said A. G. Simmons; that at the time of the execution of said mortgage, A. G. Simmons did not own the property mortgaged to Napier Bros., nor did A. G. Simmons own any such property at the time it is alleged said mortgage was foreclosed ; . . that it was impossible for her to produce said property, as she is informed that no such property as is described in said bond was ever in existence, that A. G. Simmons never did own any such property, and that Jack Hancock, sheriff, never did levy upon or seize any such property as is described in said bond; . . that when said mortgage fi. fa. . . was placed in the hands of . Hancock, sheriff, he . . turned said fi. fa. over to W. J. P. Lowe, deputy-sheriff; that when said deputy-sheriff went to make said levy . . he was informed . . that A. G. Simmons did not own any such property as set forth in said mortgage fi. fa., and for this reason said deputy-sheriff did not make levy; that on the following morning A. G. Simmons came into Knoxville and went to Hancock, sheriff, and told him that he would- admit or acknowledge levy, whereupon . . Hancock, sheriff, made entry of levy on [the] fi. fa.; that at the time J. W. Stroud signed said bond . . Hancock, sheriff, well knew that no legal levy had been made on the property set out in said bond, and well knew also that the recital in said bond to the effect that said property had been levied upon by him was not true in fact; that it was the duty of . . Hancock, sheriff, to put said J. W. Stroud on notice as to the truth or falsity of said bond, and which he failed to do. She therefore says that [neither] said J. W. Stroud nor she as his executrix is liable for any breach of said bond, . . Hancock, sheriff, being primarily liable to the plaintiff; . . that inducing or standing by and allowing . . Stroud to sign said bond when the said sheriff knew that the recitals therein were false was a moral fraud upon ■. . Stroud, and [neither] he nor his representatives should be held liable for any breach of said bond.”

To this plea the plaintiff demurred, on the ground that no suffi[335]*335cient reason was given for the failure of the defendant to either admit or deny the allegations of the petition as to the foreclosure of the mortgage and the filing and trial of the affidavit of illegality, these being matters of record accessible to the defendant; and on the further grounds that the answer was not good as a plea of non est factum, and was not responsive to the allegations of the petition. To paragraph 6 of the answer he demurred, “ because the same sets forth no defense to said petition, and because said defendant is estopped from denying the levy or ownership of said property, by the bond sued upon.” This demurrer was sustained, and every paragraph of the plea except two, which were unimportant, was stricken. The defendant then offered the following amendment to her plea: “Defendant avers that the property described in. the entry of levy by the sheriff, and set out in the alleged bond, . . is not, and was not at the time of the alleged levy, the property of the defendant in fi. fa., A. G. Simmons, and was not subject to the fi. fa. in [the] hands of the sheriff in favor of Napier Bros., and, in consequence of this material fact, no damage has been suffered by the said Jack Hancock, sheriff, on account of the alleged breach of the bond.” The plaintiff filed a general demurrer to this amendment, which was sustained, and the amendment was stricken. The bill of exceptions recites that, “there being no issue raised by the pleas of the defendant as to the amount of the mortgage fi. fa. in favor of Napier Bros., to which A. G. Simmons interposed an illegality, or as to the value of the property described in the entry of levy by the sheriff, the plaintiff only introduced the fi. fa., the judgment of the superior court of Pike county for damages; . . and there being no issue for the jury to pass on, . . the plaintiff’s .attorney made out and submitted a calculation for the jury, based on the mortgage fi. fa. and the judgment for damages in Pike superior court, and the jury . . found accordingly.” Before this was done, however, the defendant made a motion for a nonsuit, which was denied. The defendant excepts to the overruling of her demurrer to the petition, to the sustaining of the plaintiff’s demurrers to her plea and amendment, and to the refusal of the court to grant a nonsuit.

The only question which we feel called upon to decide is that of the legal sufficiency of those portions of the plea and the amendment thereto which were stricken on demurrer, for the correctness [336]*336of the rulings of the trial court on the demurrer to the petition and on the motion for nonsuit are necessarily involved in the decision of that question. It is evident that the bond sued upon is not such a bond as is contemplated by the Civil Code, § 2766, as the accompaniment of an affidavit of illegality to the levy of a mortgage fi. fa. That section provides for a bond payable to the plaintiff in fi. fa.,, “who may sue thereon for condition broken,” conditioned for the-return of the property when called for by the levying officer. The bond given in the present case was an ordinary forthcoming bond,, payable to the sheriff, and conditioned for the return of the property at the time and place of sale.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 496, 116 Ga. 332, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroud-v-hancock-ga-1902.