99 Ga. 534 | Ga. | 1896
The facts are stated in the official report.
1. By the act of the General Assembly approved December 20th, 1890 (Acts 1890-91, vol. 1, p. 108), it is made the duty of the clerk of the superior court of each county to keep an attachment docket in which he is required to enter the names of plaintiff and defendant in! , attachment, the court to which it is returnable, the amount claimed, the day and hour of levy, and a brief general description of the property levied upon; and the lien of an attachment thus entered is protected against a transfer of the property levied on by the defendant in attachment, or the creation of any lien thereon by him. The question is, whether the clerk of the superior court must, in the absence of a request to so enter an attachment levied and filed with him, enter it upon the docket in response to the duty imposed by the statute. "We think he must. The law imposes upon him this duty for the protection of plaintiffs suing out attachments. Its performance is not left to
2. It was urged, that even though the defendant neglected to perform the duty above referred to, the plaintiffs were notwithstanding not entitled to recover, because of the fact that the judgment, the lien of which was alleged to have been lost by reason of the misfeasance of the clerk, was void, it having been rendered by the court without the intervention of a jury; and that for 'this reason it created no lien upon the property of the defendant, and as a consequence the plaintiffs sustained no injury. It appears from the record in this case, that the plaintiffs in the court below, having recovered a judgment in the State of Tennessee against one Nock, caused an attachment to issue thereon and to be levied upon the property of the defendant in the foreign judgment, said property so levied upon being situated in the State of Georgia. A declaration was duly filed declaring upon the judgment rendered in the State of Tennessee, and upon the trial of that cause-the court awarded judgment without the intervention of a. jury. It was insisted that the foreign judgment was not an unconditional contract in writing, and -that theref ore the court- had no authority to render judgment thereon without the intervention of a jury.
It was the purpose of the constitution of this State, paragraph 1, section 18, article 6, to preserve the right of trial
We conclude, therefore, that whether tbe judgment of tbe court in tbe present case was adverse to tbe plaintiffs, because tbe judgment obtained on the foreign judgment tos void, it having been rendered without tbe intervention of a jury, or whether it was adverse to tbe plaintiffs because of tbe opinion entertained by tbe court, that, upon tbe facts stated, tbe clerk was guilty of no breach of duty,, it was in either event wrong, iand it is accordingly
Reversed.