Walker v. O'Neill Manufacturing Co.

58 S.E. 475, 128 Ga. 831, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 9, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 475 (Walker v. O'Neill Manufacturing Co.) 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
Walker v. O'Neill Manufacturing Co., 58 S.E. 475, 128 Ga. 831, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 216 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

An attorney at law had in his hands for collection separate claims against a debtor in favor of four separate creditors. The debtor was insolvent, and at a sale of his assets by a receiver the attorney at law purchased for his own use an open account due to the debtor by another person. The attorney then notified his four clients of his purchase, and offered to let them have the account so purchased if each would pay sums proportionate to their respective claims sufficient in amount to reim[832]*832burse him. They agreed, and paid him the money. After such payment, the attorney at law, for convenience, sued the account so purchased in the name of one of his clients only, the record not disclosing that any other person had any interest therein. Judgment was obtained. Thereupon garnishment proceedings were instituted against the employer of the defendant, and judgment was obtained against the garnishee. In the garnishment there was no suggestion of any other party plaintiff than the sole creditor, the Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Company, in whose name suit had been originally instituted. After the rendition of the judgment in the garnishment proceeding, the attorney caused execution to issue thereon and retained it in his possession. Afterwards the attorney in his individual name sought to purchase the execution from the plaintiff. The purchase-price was agreed upon, and the attorney entered upon the execution a blank assignment thereof to himself and forwarded the same to the plaintiff for the purpose of having the assignment executed- by the plaintiff, and, at the same time, authorized a draft to be drawn by the plaintiff on him for the purchase-price. The assignment was executed according to directions, with the exception that the date was omitted. On account of that omission the attorney was unwilling to accept it. Upon this point we may quote from the testimony of the attorney as follows: “Seeing the date to be filled in by them had not been filled in, after holding it for quite a while, the fi. fa. was returned to them to supply the date. It remained quite a while in their hands, and was finally returned to me undated. . , For several days before, and at the time of that payment of July 17th, I had the fi. fa., had it on the 8th or 10th of July. I had the fi. fa. levied, and this illegality was interposed to the levy.” There was-nothing said by the attorney at law indicating that the purchase contemplated a credit transaction. On the contrary, testimony was introduced to the effect that it was a cash transaction, which fact does not appear to be in any way contested by the attorney. Pending the negotiations above recited, the defendant in fi. fa. also entered into negotiations with the plaintiff in fi. fa. for the purchase of the execution, and succeeded, in consideration of the true amount of the principal and interest and cost due to the plaintiff, without respect to any of the three other alleged creditors, whose names were not disclosed by the judgment, in obtain[833]*833ing from the plaintiff a written assignment .in these words: “Louisville, Kentucky, July 17, 1900. Eeeeived of O’Neill Manufacturing Company of Home, Georgia, $257.99 in full and complete settlement of all our interests in a certain judgment of the superior court of Floyd County,. Georgia, which was rendered on the 12th day of April, 1899, in favor of the Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Company v. O’Neill Manufacturing Company as garnishees.” The consideration expressed in this assignment, $257.99, is the same payment to which reference was made in the testimony of the attorney above quoted, as having been made on “July 17th.” It thus appears from the testimony of the attorney, who was the plaintiff in error in the present ease, that at the time of the purchase of the execution by the defendant, the execution was actually in his hands, delivered to him by the plaintiff. There was undisputed testimony to the effect that the attorney did not pay the purchase-price which he agreed to pay for the execution, but, having possession of it under the' circumstances already enumerated, he caused the same to be levied on the defendant’s property. After the levy, the defendant filed an affidavit of illegality upon the ground, among others, that the fi. fa. had been paid and fully satisfied by the defendant by reason of the payment of the sum of $257.99 hereinbefore recited. The foregoing statement deals with that view of the case which is most favorable to the contentions of the plaintiff in error. The court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant in fi. fa.

1. To sustain the judgment refusing to grant a new trial, the evidence, when considered in its most favorable light for the plaintiff in error, must have been of such character as to demand a verdict against him. Considering the evidence.in this light, we are unable to see that the plaintiff in error acquired any interest in the fi. fa. by purchase. His negotiations were not prosecuted to the completion of a purchase. The contemplated sale to him was a cash transaction. He received and inspected, but did not accept the article tendered, and did not pay the purchase-price. Under such conditions the title did not pass. See, in this connection, Starnes v. Roberts, ante, 718. Other than these unconsummated and ineffectual negotiations, there was nothing to interfere with the right of the plaintiff, the Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Company, to sell the fi. fa. to the defendants therein named. [834]*834The plaintiffs did sell all of their interests and make a valid assignment therein in writing. When they sold their interests, they sold the entire execution, because there was no other party plaintiff, and consequently no one else to be consulted. Whatever may have been the interests of other persons in the subject-matter of the suit which resulted in the first judgment, those interests could not, under the condition of the record, be traced into the present judgment so as to acquire a lien upon the defendant’s property. The plaintiff, the Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Company, did not in either suit pretend to proceed for the use of any person except themselves. If other parties had an interest in the original execution, they would have been proper parties to the first suit and could have obtained an interest in the judgment, but as against the defendants there is no theory by which they could remain out of the case until judgment and then claim by force of the judgment a lien upon the defendant’s property. See, in this connection, Whitman v. Bolling, 47 Ga. 125; Smith v. Pate, 51 Ga. 246; City Bank of Macon v. Crossland, 65 Ga. 734 (4).

2, 3. But it is insisted that the plaintiffs, by a sale of the execution, could not defeat the lien of the attorney for his fees, and that he had a right to have the execution proceed for the purpose of enabling him to collect his fees. It is contended that his lien exists under the provisions of the Civil Code, §2814, par. 2,

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 475, 128 Ga. 831, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-oneill-manufacturing-co-ga-1907.