56 Ga. 609 | Ga. | 1876
Simmons bought from Hudson a judgment against Cates, with Culver, as surety on appeal, and he bought from Spence
Any act of the creditor, either before or after judgment, which injures the security, or increases his risk, or exposes him to greater liability, will discharge him: Code, section 2154. The act here complained of is the application of the fund brought by the sheriff’s sale from the principal’s property toa junior judgment, and the question is, did that act discharge the surety ? In 4th Georgia Reports, 356, it is distinctly ruled that such a fund must be applied to the older fi. fa.; that it is not at the option of the plaintiff to apply it as he pleases, but that the law applies it to the older lien. In 11th Georgia Reports, 636, it was held that if an execution creditor, by his consent and direction, he having the older lien, allows a payment of funds in the sheriff’s hands to be made to a junior fi. fa., it extinguishes his older lien pro tanto, if third persons are prejudiced thereby.
Does the extinguishment of this older lien in this case hurt this surety? It certainly does. He would be entitled to control that judgment when he paid it off; but if he sought to enforce it against any third person who had bought the principal defendant’s property since the lien attached, he would be met by the pleas that, as against such third person, the creditor in fi. fa. had, by this act, extinguished the lien of the judgment on which he was surety. Thus this act of the creditor, Simmons, in this ease, by extinguishing this lien of
Judgment affirmed.