148 Ga. 294 | Ga. | 1918
1. Tbe Court of Appeals has requested instructions upon certain questions of law, the nature of which will sufficiently appear from the opinion following.
The exception was to a judgment refusing a new trial, in which the defendants complained of-the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff. The suit was against a surety company that had become surety on the official bond of a sheriff, and against the administrator upon the estate of the executrix of the will of the sheriff, she being also his sole legatee. Copies of the bond and of the will were set out in the petition, and the bond showed that the obligations of the sheriff and his surety were joint and several. The surety company filed a demurrer upon the grounds: (a) that the petition did not set forth a cause of action against either defendant named therein; (5) that if the allegations stated a cause of action, it appeared from the face of the petition that it had accrued
2. As indicated in the preceding division, the suit was upon the sheriff’s bond for a breach of official duty. The alleged breach consisted of an omission to pay over to the estate of J. P. Wilde the balance of the proceeds of sale of certain land, after having satisfied certain tax fi. fas. under which the land was sold. On the hypothesis that the evidence showed that after satisfying the tax fi. fas. the sheriff made an entry on his official sales book that the remainder of the proceeds of sale was to be "given to the heirs of J. Patterson Wilde,” and that no demand for payment was made on the sheriff in his lifetime (he having died in December, 1905), or on the executrix of his will, until 1914, and that there was no administration upon the estate of Wilde until 1911, and that the principal sum sued for "was retained in the hands of the sheriff and had never been paid over to those entitled thereto,” the Court of Appeals propound the following questions: If the defendants are to be held liable in the suit, should interest be charged against them in accordance with the verdict, or only from the date of the appointment of the administrator upon the estate of J. P. Wilde, and demand made upon the executrix?