73 Ga. 235 | Ga. | 1884
The sheriff was ruled to bring into court a certain y?. fa,., with his actings and doings thereon, which had been placed in his hands, and levied on seven bales of cotton on the 15th day of December, 1873. It was alleged in the motion for the rule that the cotton had never been sold, or in any way accounted for. He was required to show cause why he should not pay they?, /«., or in default thereof,why he should not be attached. In response to the rulé served upon him, he showed for cause that he levied th eft. fa., as charged against him, andleft the cotton, after levying upon it, with one Bell, to take charge of and hold it subject to his order Admits he never sold the cotton, because the advertising fees were not tendered,.and .because he was-served with an injunction issuing out of the district court of the United States for the southern district of Georgia, sitting in bankruptcy, and in which court the defendant in execution had filed his petition to be declared-a bankrupt, forbidding him from interfering with the cotton levied on; that the injunction, as he Was advised and believed, was then pending'and undetermined; — this was four years
No motion was made for a new trial. Respondent’s counsel made various requests to the court to charge, but none of them were given. There are quite a number of exceptions to the charge of the court. At the hearing before this court, the following questions were made and argued;
(1.) That the court erred'in refusing to compel the movant in the rule to put in evidence with his fi. fa. the proceedings on which it was founded.
(2.) Because, when the proceedings were put in evidence by the respondent, it was shown that no demand was made upon the defendant within twelve months after the claim fell due; that for this reason the proceeding was void, and the respondent was not bound to execute a void process, and was not to be held responsible, under the rule, for failing therein.
(3.) Because he was restrained by the injunction issuing from the district court of the United States, sitting in bankruptcy, and was thereby protected from the rule, and it was incumbent upon the movant to show, before he could
The ground that the advertising fees had not been paid or tendered, if entitíed to consideration under the facts set forth in the proceeding, was effectually disposed of by the evidence adduced on the trial of the issue, and was not insisted on in the argument before this court.
To shield himself from liability, it is not sufficient to set up that he acted honestly and in good faith, and intended no disobedience of the precept of the court. Whether he did so or not, is not to be judged of by himself, but by the court. What may have been his private thought and motive, we cannot certainly know, but we can see nothing in the facts that should have misled him in his duty. Courts are slow to accept ignorance of law as an excuse for official misconduct. 32 Ga., 362. “An officer must be diligent as well as honest. Not only must he purpose and intend to perform his duty, but he must use his intelligence to discover what that duty is; and if his own intelligence is not sufficient to deal with as plain a case as this, he cannot safely dispense with counsel.” Charles vs. Foster, 56 Ga., 616. These sound views are strikingly appropriate to the present case. This respondent has been treated most indulgently by the lower court. Had the jury found against him the full value of the entire seven bales of cotton levied on, they would have done nothing more than their duty.
Judgment affirmed.