65 Ga. 165 | Ga. | 1880
■ A tract of land belonging to Longworthy was -sold by the- sheriff -to pay his debts, under levy of executions-against him, and Featherston became the purchaser, and
1. The levy is in these words :
“I have levied this fi.fa. on the house and lot formerly owned by J. D. Waddell, and now occupied by Henry May, on the office form•erly owned by Chisolm & Waddell, now occupied by Liddel & Chisolm, •and on the house and lot formerly owned by V. B. Burton, and now occupied by W. W. Garrett, all situated in Cedartown, in Polk county, as the property of Charles W. Longworthy, non-resident, the same .having been originally attached.”
Objection was made to the introduction of the fi. fa. with this levy thereon, because it did not sufficiently •describe the property, but the court admitted the fi. fa. We think that the levy was sufficient to authorize the'execution to be admitted in evidence. A house and lot in a town wherein a certain man then (at the date of the levy) resides, is a description by which the property can be identified, particularly when aided by its having been attached, and known as the former property of another citizen. See 12 Ga., 440; 53 Ga., 191 ; 59 Ga., 711. Herman on Executions, 381-2 ; Freeman on Ex., 281.
The words “as the property” mean that the entire •estate is levied on, and the interest of defendant is sufficiently set out in the levy.
2. The court-house was burned down. No new one had been built, and no place rented for a court-house. The •superior court was held twice a year at an academy, but •school was kept there, and the county only engaged it temporarily at the time and for the time the superior court sat, and it remained and was private property. The clerk’s office was in a rented room at another place. Where the other county officers kept theirs the record does not tell
The sale by the sheriff should be at the court-house, if there be one, either owned or rented by the county authorities ; but if there be but the ashes of one, and none other substituted, the sheriff may sell there, or in full view of 'it, after proclaiming within the hours of sale to the assembled bidders that they would go to a shady place hard by to escape the oppressive heat of the sun; and one who buys for full value at such a sale will be protected by the sheriff’s title against the defendant in execution.
Judgment affirmed.