177 Ga. 497 | Ga. | 1933
W. J. Davis as superintendent of banks brought a suit-
In Atwood v. Bearss, 45 Mich. 469 (8 N. W. 55), it was held that the issuing of two executions simultaneously in violation of statute is irregular, but that a sale made under one of them is not void and subject to collateral attack. It seems that under the law of Indiana an alias execution can not be issued-by the clerk except upon the order of the judgment plaintiff. In Johnson v. Murray,
The liability of a stockholder under the banking act is fixed by the assessment, and the executiozi is simply the zneans by which the assessznent is enforced. The executiozi itself does not determine the liability, and if a second executiozi is improperly issued, it is but a duplicate means of enforcing the assessment, and, if not attacked in some appropriate manner by the defendant in fi. fa., may be effectively used as process for a .sale of the defendant’s property. In Cooper v. Huff, 55 Ga. 119, it was held that an execution bearing an entry by the clerk, “Issued in lieu of lost original,” did not constitute ground for excluding the execution from evidence upon objection by the claimant. In Waison v. Halsted, supra, it was held that while the clerk may not issue an alias execution without an order of court, an objection to the regularity of the proceeding comes too late after the parties have litigated a claim case under the fi. fa. This was an implied holding that the execution was not void.
Undoubtedly the superintendent of banks had authority so to amend the execution as to make the same conform to the assessment. The power to do the greater included authority to do the less. Furthermore, a variance in the amount between an execution and the assessment upon which it is founded would not necessarily render the execution void. See Ward v. Miller, 143 Ga. 164 (2) (84. S. E. 480); 23 C. J. 407, 672, §§ 184, 663. The answer to the suit for specific performance failed to set forth a valid defense, and was properly stricken on demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.