180 Ga. 578 | Ga. | 1935
The State of Georgia, by John A. Boykin, solicitor-general of the Atlanta judicial circuit, filed a petition in Fulton superior court to condemn one Chevrolet automobile truck, motor No. K-4173911, alleging that the same was seized on June 10, 1934, by E. W. Wilson and E. G. Fitzgerald, officers empowered by law to make arrests, the said truck being at the time employed by an unknown person in transporting 151 gallons of whisky over Casey Road, a public highway in Fulton County, Georgia, which use subjected it to seizure and sale by the State; that the seizure was reported to said solicitor-general on June 11, 1934, and the petition was filed within ten days thereafter; that the user of the said truck escaped, and the owner was unknown. The prayer was for service of the unknown owner by publication, that judgment be rendered against said truck, that it be sold and the proceeds thereof be distributed as provided by law. Notice of the proceeding to condemn having been published as required by law, and no defense having been filed within thirty days from the date of the filing of the petition, the court, on July 14, 1934, rendered a judgment of condemnation against said truck, ordering that it be sold by the sheriff of Fulton County on July 30, 1934, at public outcry in front of the court-house door in Fulton County, after posting notice of
The Code of 1933, § 58-207, provides for condemnation, after seizure, of any vehicle used on any of the public roads of this State in conveying any liquors or beverage the sale or possession of which is prohibited by law, and further provides that the proceeds from the sale shall be applied (a) to the payment of the expenses in said case, (b) one third of the remainder to be paid to the officer making the seizure and furnishing the proof, (c) to the payment of costs of the court, and (d) the remainder, if any, to be paid into the county treasury, to be held as a separate fund and to be paid out under order of court as insolvent costs in other cases arising from the violation of any of the provisions of the law as enacted by the act of 1917 (Ga. Laws Ex. Sess. 1917, p. 7) and the act of 1924 (Ga. Laws 1924, p. 198). The Code of 1933, § 6-911, provides: "Within 10 days after the bill of exceptions shall be signed and certified, the party plaintiff therein shall serve a copy thereof upon the opposite party or his attorney, and if there shall be several parties
Writ of error dismissed.