82 Ga. 757 | Ga. | 1889
Holt sued out a distress warrant for $300 against Seifert. It was levied upon certain property of Seifert. He filed his counter-affidavit denying that any part of the sum claimed for rent was due, and averring that the contract upon which the rent was claimed was made and executed on the Sabbath day. He filed with the levying officer a bond for the condemnation money, with Freeman and Flanders Brothers as sureties thereon. At the August term, 1886, of said court, the plaintiff' obtained the following verdict: “We, the jury, find the warrant proceed” ; upon which verdict Holt entered judgment against Seifert and the sureties on his bond for $300, with interest. Execution was issued upon this judgment, which was levied upon certain property as the property of the defendants, and Flanders Brothers filed an affidavit of file
The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. The affidavit of illegality and the motion to vacate the judgment were overruled and refused, and the execution was ordered to proceed. The defendants excepted to the judgment and assigned the same as error.
The main points relied on by counsel for the plaintifi in error in the argument of the case before us were: (1) that the case was not called in its order in the superior court, and the defendants being non-resident, and having no notice of the time the case was set for trial, the verdict should be set aside, in order to give them an opportunity to make their defences before the jury. The judge who tried the case certifies that the rule agreed upon and adopted by him in the superior court of Monroe county requires the docket to be called in its order, and the eases thus called which are ready for trial are set down for a hearing three days thereafter, and that this case was called in its order and thus set for trial. It appears that when the day for which it was set arrived, the defendants and their counsel were not present, and the trial proceeded and a verdict was had in their absence. (2) The defendants also relied upon the ground that the verdict was so uncertain and indefinite that no proper judgment could be entered thereon.
Giving the verdict a reasonable intendment, and construing it with the allegations in the distress warrant, we think the clear intention of the jury was to find in favor of the plaintiff, and to find that Seifert was indebted to Holt $300 with interest. And as we have seen, if we can arrive at the meaning of the jury by construing the verdict and the pleadings, the verdict is sufficient, and will be allowed'to stand. We therefore think the court did not err in refusing to- set aside the judgment on this ground.
Upon a review of the- whole case, we see no error committed by the trial court which would authorize us to reverse this judgment.
Judgment affirmed.