168 Ga. 238 | Ga. | 1929
Hannahatchee Ranch Corporation filed a petition against E. L. Douglas, transferee of a tax execution, and against the tax-collector. The petition alleged that a parcel of land was purchased by the plaintiff on March 6, 1928, after taxes of 1927 had become due and had gone to execution against plain
The court properly overruled the demurrer and granted the injunction. The Civil Code, § 6029, provides as follows: “Where property is subject to a lien and part of it is sold by the debtor, the part remaining in him should be first applied to the payment of the lien. If the property subject to such lien is sold in several parcels at different times, the parcels should be charged in the inverse order of their alienation.” In Columbia Trust & Realty Co. v. Alston, 163 Ga. 83 (135 S. E. 431); application was made of the statute just quoted to the facts of that case. Dnder the language of the statute, and of the rulings in the case just referred to and in Askew v. Scottish American Mortgage Co., 114 Ga. 300 (40 S. E. 256), the demurrer was not sustainable, and the injunction properly followed. See also Herrington v. Parham, 166 Ga. 204 (142 S. E. 858), and cit.; Noles v. Few, 155 Ga. 471 (117 S. E. 374).
Judgment affirmed.
The second headnote states the ruling of the majority of the court; but I am of the opinion that, as this is an equitable suit, the holder of the security deed to the lot of land known as parcel 3, which petitioners claim is subject to the tax fi. fa., should have been made a party; and as she was not a party, the demurrer on the ground of nonjoinder of parties should have been sustained.