80 Ga. 679 | Ga. | 1888
An execution in favor of Chapman was levied upon a boat as the property of Inness, the defendant in execution. Postell interposed a claim. On the trial, it áppeared that a half-interest in the boat belonged to the claimant, and the other half-interest to the defendant in execution; and the jury found that a half-interest was subject to the levy. The court awarded all the costs against the claimant; to which the claimant excepted.
We think the costs should have been apportioned equally between the claimant and the plaintiff in execution. In such a case as this, equality is equity. Both parties were at fault, the plaintiff in levying on too much of the boat, and the claimant in claiming too much of it. If the claimant had merely claimed an undivided half-interest, the costs would have fallen entirely upon the plaintiff in execution. Our view of this case is sustained by the Supreme Court of South Carolina in the case of Storey vs. Bailey, decided March 1, 1888, (The Reporter, Vol. 25, p. 504,) and by the authorities cited in that case; Martin vs. Vallance, 1 East, 350; Day vs. Hanks, 3 T. R. 654; Seymour
We reverse the judgment of the court below, and direct that half of the costs be entered against the plaintiff in execution and the other half against the claimant.
Judgment reversed.