Vickers v. Hawkins

58 S.E. 44, 128 Ga. 794, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 208
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 44 (Vickers v. Hawkins) 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
Vickers v. Hawkins, 58 S.E. 44, 128 Ga. 794, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 208 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Evans, J.

The action was complaint for land, and has been twice tried. On a review of the first trial the verdict was set aside and the ease remanded to the superior court. See 111 Ga. 119. On the second trial the plaintiff introduced a grant from the State, and mesne conveyances from the State’s grantee to herself. The defendant proffered in evidence a tax fi. fa. and the sheriff’s deed to one Dixon (under whom he claimed title); whereupon the plaintiff filed an affidavit of forgery, averring that the sheriff’s deed, the tax fi. fa. and the entry of levy on the fi. fa. were forgeries. Upon the preliminary proof submitted by the defendant, the court allowed in evidence the sheriff’s deed and the tax fi. fa. over the plaintiff’s objection. The plaintiff excepted pendente lite to the admission of the deed and fi. fa. The court ruled that the filing of the affidavit of forgery devolved upon the defendant the burden of proving the genuineness of the tax fi. fa. and levy, and to show that any alteration appearing in the entry of levy was made prior to the sheriff’s sale, and instructed the jury to this effect. No separate issue of forgery was made, hut the issues of the genuineness of the tax fi. fa. and entry of levy were submitted along with the other issues in the case. The defendant also introduced a deed to himself from the purchaser at the tax sale, and proof that he had been in possession of the land since that time, and had made thereon permanent and substantial improvements. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff; the court refused a new trial, and the defendant excepted. The plaintiff sued out a cross-bill of exceptions, assigning error on her pendente-lite exceptions.

1. On the call of the ease in this court the defendant in error moved to dismiss the hill of exceptions, because the only service thereof was an acknowledgment of service by the next friend, Herbert Hawkins; that he is only a formal party, and that A. H. Hawkins is the real party in the case, and service should have been had upon her. The purpose of having a guardian ad litem, or next friend to represent a minor is to furnish a person sui juris to carry on the litigation for the minor’s benefit. Service of notice or other process pertaining to the ease prosecuted by a prochein ami should be made upon him. He represents the minor in the particular liti[796]*796gation, and if service can not be had upon him, his connection with the case would be without practical value. We therefore hold that the next friend was the proper person upon whom to serve the bill of exceptions, and the motion to dismiss is denied.

2. As between the litigants, according to the proof made at the trial, the ownership of the land in controversy depends upon the validity of the tax sale. We will therefore first examine the objections to the admissibility of the fi. fa. upon which error is assigned in the cross-bill of exceptions. The tax fi. fa. was as follows : “Georgia, Worth County.' To the sheriff of Worth County to execute and return, to advertise'and sell according to law: You are hereby commanded that of unreturned wild land number 211, in the 14th district of Worth County, you cause to be made the sum of $3.26, it being the amount of State and county tax for the year 1888, and the further sum of 50 cents for the costs of this fi. fa., and make due return thereof to me according to law. Herein fail not. Given under my hand and seal, this the 20th day of Dee. 1888. [Signed] W. J. Stoy, T. C. (L. S.).” Endorsed upon the fi. fa. was the following entry of levy: “I have this day levied the within fi. fa. u,pon lot of land number 211 in the 14th district of said county, for State and county tax for the year 1888. January 30th, 1889. [Signed] S. M. Cox, sheriff.” The plaintiff objected to the tax fi. fa. and entry of levy endorsed thereon being received in evidence, because the tax fi. fa was signed “W. J. Stoy, T. C.,” when it was admitted in open court by the defendant that the tax-collector in the year 1888 was W. J. Story; that the letters “T. C.,” following the name of W. J. Stoy, did not show that the execution was issued by the tax-collector of the county. Objection was further made to the introduction of the fi. fa., on the ground that one of the defendant’s witnesses had already testified that the execution was not signed and issued by the tax-collector of Worth County, but was signed by witness at the request of the tax-collector, the plaintiff contending that the tax-collector could not delegate any verbal authority to sign the execution, witness not testifying that he had been appointed to collect taxes in Worth County in 1888.

It appeared that the tax-collector was dead at the time of the trial. While the testimony did not directly establish that the tax-collector’s name was signed by the witness in the tax-collector’s [797]*797presence, it does appear that it was done at the special instance and request of the tax-collector, at his house, and under such circumstances as might afford an inference that it was done in his presence. It is the duty of the tax-collector to sign a tax execution. It is not essential, however, that he should actually do the manual act of signing his name in every instance. In Hitchcock v. Latham, 97 Ga. 253, objection was made to the introduction in evidence of an execution, on the ground that the name thereto purporting to be that of the tax-collector “was in printing as it came from the printing-office,” and that therefore the execution did not bear the genuine signature of the tax-collector, and there was nothing to show when, how, or where the name of the tax-collector had been affixed to the execution. But this court held that the objection was not good where it affirmatively appeared that the fi. fa. carne into the sheriff’s hands, who-had acted upon it as a legal execution, and in so doing had levied upon, advertised, and sold.land; that in the absence of further proof on the subject it will be presumed that the printed signature was authorized by the tax-collector, and that he issued the execution as his official act. It appeared from the record in this case that the sheriff had acted upon this fi. fa., advertised the land levied on to satisfy it, sold the land thereunder, and made a deed to the purchaser at the sale. As a general rule, when the law declares that a process shall be signed by a particular official, his name can not be affixed to it by another, not in his presence, under a previous general authority. Biggers v. Winkles, 124 Ga. 990, However, we are not in opposition to this general proposition when we hold that the facts of this ease bring it within the principle of the Hitchcock ease, supra.

The misspelling of the tax-collector’s name of itself furnishes no ground to hold the fi. fa. illegal. It is clear that if the tax-collector, in signing his name, had inadvertently omitted a letter, and the proof showed that he actually signed it, the signature would be valid.

3. Nor was the objection good that the letters “T. C.” following his signature were insufficient to show that he had signed the execution in his official character. Under the law existing at that time, such a fi. fa. must have been issued by the tax-collector, and it is-to be presumed that the abbreviation “T. C.” represents the officer’s official character.

[798]*7984, 5. The fi. fa.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 44, 128 Ga. 794, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vickers-v-hawkins-ga-1907.