119 Ga. 10 | Ga. | 1903
In February, 1888, Palmour borrowed $2,000 from Smith, executing his promissory note therefor, and also, as security for the payment of the note, a warranty deed to certain land in Dawson county. Subsequently, at different times during the same year, he borrowed $300 more, for which he also gave notes. The land conveyed by the deed referred to was described, not by metes and bounds, but by the numbers of the land-lots, the entire land conveyed consisting of thirty-three land-lots and a designated fractional part of another land-lot, with the exception of a life-estate which had already been conveyed in certain of the lots mentioned and a small tract which had been set apart for use as a church. Palmour failed to pay the notes when they fell due, and in 1900 Smith obtained two judgments against him, one for ■$2,000 and the other for $300. Each of these judgments contained provision for a special lien upon the land conveyed by the deed executed to secure the notes, and described the land by the
What has been said so far leads us to the following conclusions : The deed from Palmour to Smith did not, as a matter of law, convey the property in separate parcels, though it is susceptible of that construction. The intention of the parties to the instrument was a matter for the jury, and to a jury it was fairly submitted under appropriate instructions. The judgment against the property and the execution issued thereon merely followed the description in the deed, and did not constitute a mandate to the sheriff to sell the land in parcels. Whether or not the land in fact constituted distinct parcels was likewise a question which was properly submitted to the jury. Conceding that it was so divisible, the mode of selling it — whether by parcels or in bulk — was, in the absence of instructions on that subject in the order directing the sale, a matter within the discretion of the sheriff, having in view the object to make the property bring the best possible price. On this branch of the case we find no error in any of the rulings of the trial court.
The charge as to the effect upon the sale of inadequacy of
Judgment affirmed.