104 Ga. 230 | Ga. | 1898
It appears from the record, that in 1889 certain real estate was levied upon under a fi. fa. against R. W. Murphy. W. A. Russell interposed a claim, which was, by consent of the plaintiff in fi. fa., withdrawn. Russell afterward filed another claim, which the clerk marked on the claim-docket as “settled.” The land was again advertised for sale under the levy, and Russell filed an equitable petition in which he alleged that the land had been purchased in 1881 by Mrs. Murphy, wife of the defendant in fi. fa., and that in 1886 she had sold it to him for the sum of $1,000; that the second claim was marked as settled without his knowledge or consent or that of his attorney; and that the sheriff was proceeding to sell the property while petitioner’s claim was still legally pending. He reasserted his claim to the land, and prayed an injunction to prevent the sale. The sheriff and the plaintiff in fi. fa. answered, and the case came on to trial. The plaintiff in fi. fa. contended, among other things, that the deed from Mrs. Murphy to the claimant, Russell, was not attested by two witnesses as required by law, and conveyed no title; that Murphy being his wife’s sole heir and she having died leaving no debts, the property, under the laws of this State, passed to the husband and was therefore subject to be sold for his debts. The conveyance under which Russell claimed purported to be a warranty-deed from Mrs. Murphy to Russell, made in consideration of $1,000 in cash, and was subscribed by two witnesses. One of these, a notary public, when sworn stated that he had subscribed his name to the paper after the death of the grantor, and that he had not been present when she executed it. Murphy, the husband, testified that the deed was made by his
Judgment reversed.