93 Ga. 579 | Ga. | 1894
' Houseal and Treadaway commenced a statutory action for the recovery of personal property against Sims & Auchmuty in Haralson county, and made the usual- affidavit to hold to bail; the property was seized by the sheriff of that county, and a replevy bond was executed by defendants, and the name of McGinnis as surety was signed thereto by his son. Judgment was rendered against Sims & Auchmuty as principals, and against McGinnis as surety on the bond. Execution issued thereon, and was assigned by the plaintiffs to Rounsaville & Brother, of Eloyd county, who had it levied upon land of McGinnis in Bartow county. McGinnis thereupon filed his petition for injunction in the latter county, against the sheriff' of that county and Rounsaville & Brother, seeking to restrain the enforcement of the judgment and execution above alluded to, on the ground that he had never signed the bond upon which the judgment was founded, nor authorized his son to sign it, and had never heard of the case nor the bond until after the judgment was rendered. He prayed also for the recovery of damages against the sheriff' and Rounsa.ville & Brother as joint trespassers. A restraining order was granted, and at the hearing the judge decided that the same be continued until the termination of the cause. The defendants excepted to this decision and to the refusal of the judge to hold that the superior court of Bartow county had no jurisdiction of the case, and to his not holding that the plaintiff' had a complete and adequate remedy at law without the intervention of equity jurisdiction.
The only cases we have found in which this court has held that a petition to restrain a levy could be maintained against a non-resident, are the cases of Wright, comptroller-general, v. Southwestern Railroad Co., 64 Ga. 794, and Mayo, sheriff, v. Renfroe, 66 Ga. 408, which are clearly distinguishable from the case now under consideration. In. the first of those, cases the execution was for taxes due the State, and was issued by an officer of