109 Ga. 180 | Ga. | 1899
Hiles Carver Company sued .out an attachment against McBurnett, on the ground of his non-residence. Upon this attachment was an entry of levy in usual form upon a certain house and lot in the town of Waco, Ga., as the property of the defendant, the entry containing a full description of the property seized. A judgment was afterwards rendered for the plaintiff against the defendant, subjecting theproperty attached;
The question raised by this record is whether or not the levy of an attachment on land is void simply because the officer does not describe in his entry of levy upon the fi. fa. the particular manner of the seizure, and does not recite that he had given either the defendant or tenant in possession notice of the levy. We know of no law requiring the officer to make any such recitals in the levy. The statute simply requires the officer to enter his levy on the process by virtue of which such levy is made, and such entry shall plainly describe the property levied on, and the amount of interest of the defendant therein. Civil Code, § 5421. This provision was fully complied with by the entry of the officer made in this case. The expression, “I have this day levied,” implies a legal seizure by the officer of the property described in his entry, and raises the presumption in favor of such officer of a valid and legal seizure of the property described. The burden of showing an omission of duty which renders the seizure illegal or invalid in any particular case is on the party making such an attack upon the levy. As stated in the opinion of Simmons, C. J., in the case Greer v. Fergerson, 104 Ga. 555, in speaking of a levy of a tax fi. fa. upon land by an officer, “The law presumes that the owners of the land had the notice prescribed, for it presumes that public officers will do their duty.” The attachment hr this case, therefore, together with the entry of levy by the officer thereon, was upon its face regular and valid. The claim
Judgment reversed.