17 Ga. 187 | Ga. | 1855
By the Court.
delivering the opinion..
In the'first of these two-cases, the sole question is, whether the Court below was right in refusing to dismiss the illegality proceeding.
The first ground assigned in the- illegality proceeding was,., that the judgment had become dormant.
The Act of 1822, commonly called the Dormant Judgment Act, declares that, “all judgments” “on which no execution shall be sued out, or which execution,, if sued out, no return shall be made by the proper officer for executing, and returning the same, within seven- years from- the -date of the- judgment, shall be void and of no effect.”
In this- case, the judgment was obtained in 1838. In the same year, or early in the next, a fi. fa. was issued from the judgment. In 1839 this fi. fa. was levied; and soon after-wards, in the same year, the property levied on was sold. AH this was entered, by the Sheriff, on the fi. fa.
On the 6th of November, 1840, a ea. sa. was issued from the judgment. On the 7th of November, 1840, Short, one of-the defendants, was arrested under the ea. sa\ and he gave bond for his appearance to take the benefit of the- Honest Debtor’s Act.
All this was entered on the ea. sa. by the Sheriff’s deputy, the officer making the arrest.
In 1853, Mayo, who had then become the Sheriff of Lee, offered the property thus levied on for sale; and to prevent him from selling the property, Short interposed the affidavit of illegality ; to dismiss which, the motion aforesaid was made. The Sheriff properly returned this affidavit.
It thus appears, that the judgment, at the time when this ■affidavit was put in, had not become dormant; for it appears, first, that within less than two years from the date of the judgment, an execution was sued out from the judgment, and was levied on property of the defendants or of one of them; that this property was sold by the Sheriff, and that an entry of his levy and sale was made by him on the fi. fa. Secondly, that there was no interval of as much as seven years between any entry and the next following entry — the longest interval between any two such entries being that between the entry of arrest on the casa, which was dated 7th November, 1840, and that of the entry of the levy on the fi. fa. by Gilmore, which was dated in September, 1847, and that being less than seven years.
The next ground assigned for the illegality proceeding, was, that the fi. fa. was an alias fi. fa.
It is true, that in such a case as this was, that of a lostyi. fa. —the law, as held by this Court, requires the substitute to be not an alias fi. fa. but an established copy of the original yi. fa. (11 Ga. 642.)
But we regard this fi. fa. as intended to be an established copy. For although it is called, in some of the proceedings in the case, an alias fi. fa. and although it is dated of a day subsequent to the day of the date of the one lost, and is signed by the person who was then Clerk, yet, it is, upon its face, not an alias, because it does say — “we command you, as before we have commanded you," fc. and because it is not the mere
Besides, the order carries upon its face marks of a design to establish a copy. Why else is the fi. fa. that is to be issued ordered to stand in lieu of the lost original ? An alias stands in lieu of nothing; it is, itself, an original.
And considering it as an established copy, the defects about it do not render it void — they are such as are amendable. “ So, where a fieri facias is improperly tested, or made returnable on a particular, instead of a general return day, or on a day out of term, or in the common pleas * before us,’ instead of our Justices at Westminster,’ it may be amended by the award of execution on the roll.” (2 Tidd’s Practice.)
The third ground taken in the affidavit of illegality was, that the levy which Mayo, the Sheriff, was about to execute by sale, was one which had been dismissed by the order of the Court.
This ground being sufficient to support the illegality proceeding, the Court was right in over-ruling the motion to dismiss that proceeding.
And this disposes of the first of the two cases.
In the second case, the only question which it is necessary to decide, is whether Mayo, the Sheriff of Lee County, is subject to be ruled in Muscogee County — in the Superior Court
A rule against the Sheriff is either a criminal proceeding— a proceeding in which the State is plaintiff, or it is a civil proceeding — a proceeding at' the instance of a private person — a proceeding which is a.mere civil suit. (Penal Code, Div. 15, Sec. 1. Jud. Act of 1799, Sec's 50, 52.)
If it be a criminal proceeding, it must be taken in the county in which the crime was committed. So says the Constitution, Art. 3.
In this case the crime, if any, had to be committed in the County of Lee. That was the only county in which the Sheriff of that county could, as Sheriff, act or fail to act, under th& fi-fa.
If, therefore, the rule be a criminal proceeding, Lee was the county in which to take it.
If, on the contrary, the rule is a civil proceeding — a suit then also the rule, in this case, is to be taken in the County of Lee; for that is the county of the residence of the Sheriff, and he would be the defendant in the suit; and by the Constitution, all civil cases are to be tried in the county in which the defendant resides. [Art. 3.)
This is the result which we get from the Constitution and from Statutes; and this we understand to be sanctioned by the long-continued and unbroken usage of the Superior Courts* If it is law, it will have to be logic.
So we also affirm the judgment of the Court below in this second case.