Wheeler v. Thomas
This text of 57 Ga. 161 (Wheeler v. Thomas) 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
This was a rule against the sheriff to show cause why lie should not pay over a certain sum of money to the plaintiff on account of failure to sell defendant’s property and collect the same. The sheriff showed for cause, in his answer, that defendant had interposed an affidavit of illegality on two grounds: first, that he had pointed out other property, and the sheriff had not levied on it; and, second, that he had received no notice of the levy from the sheriff; and also to the [162]*162effect that the rule nisi was for too much; that the fi.fa. had been reduced by other payments not credited thereon, and in support of this last ground he appended the affidavit of W. A. Hawkins, the defendant, that he had paid certain sums thereon, and that no such amount as that claimed in the rule nisi was due. The plaintiff demurred to this answer, the court sustained the demurrer, and made the rule absolute for the amount claimed in the rule nisi, and ordered the sheriff attached, etc. There were sundry affidavits in respect to the amount due on the fi.fa. The errors assigned are: first, that-the affidavit of illegality protected the sheriff; second, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the sheriffs answer, and making the rule absolute for the entire amount; and, third, that the court erred in attaching,-or ordering the sheriff attached, without prior rule nisi calling on him to show cause why he should not be attached.
[163]*163forever; he cannot go behind it; shall the plaintiff get money out of him, which he not only never lost by the sheriff’s default, but never lost at all? It has been decided by this court that two things are necessary to fix the sheriff’s liability by rule — contempt of court in not executing its process, and injury to the plaintiff: Cowart vs. Dunbar, 56 Georgia Reports, 417 ; Hunter vs. Phillips, Ibid., 634; Code, section 3949. Of course injury to the plaintiff includes or involves the amount of the injury, and the sheriff is at liberty to lessen that amount by showing that the plaintiff has been paid on thefi.fa., since judgment, money not credited thereon, and thus that he is injured only so much as remains due. In respect to the affidavits of what is due, we cannot see how they were considered or could have been on demurrer to the sheriff’s answer. On the traverse of the answer testimony could be heard, the onus being on the sheriff to show that the amount due on the face of the fi. fa. ought to be lessened by sums paid to the plaintiff since judgment.
Judgment reversed.
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