102 Ga. 164 | Ga. | 1897
E. B. Rosser and B. M. Cook sued tbe Georgia Pacific Railway Company, in an action of complaint for land, to recover a strip of land containing eleven acres, more or less, in land lots 191 and 224 in tbe 17tb district of Fulton county, sucb strip being in tbe possession of the defendant and used by it as a part of its right of way. Both parties claimed title under J. M. Cook as a common grantor. The plaintiffs claimed under a sheriff’s deed dated June 5, 1883, reciting a levy and sale of 45 acres of land in tbe lots above mentioned, as the property of J. M. Cook. Tbe judgment under which this levy was made was rendered May 3, 1870, and was founded upon a debt which bad its origin on January 15, 1868. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and also that J. M. Cook, on March 4, 1872, sold the Georgia Western Railroad Company a right of way through the lots above named, being the land in dispute, and that by mutual mistake the deed was
Not only must there be notice of the levy, but there must be in all other repects what would amount to a legal levy. If the levy is for any reason void, it will not have the effect of suspending the running of the statute. A levy purporting upon its face to be upon a homestead reversion is unlawful and void. That the homestead was set apart under the provisions -of the constitution of 1868, and was therefore not a valid homestead as against the judgment which was founded upon a debt (antedating such constitution, would not make such a levy lawful. While the judgment creditor had the right to levy his execution upon the property notwithstanding the homestead, he had no right, after treating it as homestead property, to levy upon it at all. The levy being upon the reversion only, thereby treating the homestead as existing, was illegal and void. Jolly v. Lofton, 61 Ga. 154; Skinner v. Moye, 69 Ga. 477, and cases cited.
The possession of the defendant and' those under whom it claimed was properly treated as having been continuous. In
Judgment affirmed.