128 Ga. 465 | Ga. | 1907
A fi. fa. for $4,279.70, principal, besides interest, in favor of James N. Cheney as executor of A. J. Cheney, agáinst I). T. Miller and twelve others, issued from the superior court of Cobb county. Various payments, aggregating $1,806.54, were credited upon the fi. fa. as having been received in stated amounts from nine of the joint defendants. ‘ Subsequently these nine defendants procured from the plaintiff in fi. fa. a written transfer to them of the fi. fa., and the judgment upon which the same was founded, with all the rights to enforce and collect the fi. fa. as fully as the plaintiff had, the transfer purporting to be for value received. The transferees caused this fi. fa. to be levied upon the property of D. T. Miller, a codefendant; and to the levy Miller interposed an affidavit of illegality, which was returne'd' to the superior court. Upon the conclusion of the evidence the court directed a verdict in favor of 'the plaintiff, ordering the fi. fa. to proceed. The defendant Miller sued out a bill of exceptions, in which was incorporated the oral evidence submitted at the trial, and reference was made to the fi. fa., with the entries thereon, which was introduced in evidence at the trial, and which was attached to the bill of exceptions, after the judge’s certificate, without further identification. Upon the call of the ease in this court the defendant in error submitted a motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions, on the ground, that it contained a recital that the fi. fa. had been introduced as evidence upon the trial, of the case, and was attached thereto as an exhibit, but the fi. fa. was not identified in any way by the presiding judge; and that without a consideration of this evidence it would be impossible for the court to determine whether error was committed on the trial of the case.
Several of the payments made by the defendants to whom the fi. fa. was transferred are credited thereon as having been made bjr them at certain times. The recital- in the transfer that it was made for value received would authorize the inference, in the absence of anything to the contrary, that the plaintiff in fi. fa. had received from the transferees the full amount due thereon. In the case of Huckaby v. Sasser, 69 Ga. 603, it appeared that one joint defendant had paid off the fi. fa. and had it transferred to him. He allowed it to become dormant, and sued out a scire facias to-revive the judgment. Objection was made that he was not entitled to revive this judgment, under these circumstances. The court held that under the code section above quoted, he was entitled to have it revived in the name of the plaintiff for the use of the-transferee. If in point of fact the fi. fa. was assigned to some of the codefendants for less than the full amount, a defendant not' included among the transferees would be entitled to share in the-favorable settlement made by the transferees for themselves. 9 Cyc. 800. Whatever advantage one joint defendant may acquire in dealing with the common creditor inures to all the joint defendants to their common benefit, because it is as unjust to compel one joint defendant to bear more than his just proportion of the common burden, as it is to compel him to bear more than his:
Judgment affirmed.