136 Ga. 110 | Ga. | 1911
(After stating .the facts.)
If, after the forthcoming bond was given, but before the time for compliance with the obligation of it had arrived, the .property had been seized and held or sold by the sheriff under and by virtue of liens of superior dignity to the lien of the process first levied, and under which the forthcoming bond was given, the principal or surety might set up such facts as a defense, and assert that the property had been taken from their possession or control by the. law, and they could not produce it. Floyd v. Cook, 118 Ga. 526 (45 S. E. 441, 63 L. R. A. 450); Allen v. Allen, 119 Ga. 278 (45 S. E. 959). In the case now before us,'the law did not prevent the delivery of the property in accordance with the obligation of the forthcoming bond. The surety on that bond made affidavits and caused an execution and a distress warrant in his own favor to be issued and levied on the property. But, according to his pleadings, under an arrangement with the tenant, -for whom he was surety in the forthcoming bond given under the levy of the Finney mortgage, he obtained possession of the property from the sheriff, and sold it at private sale, to save the expense of legal proceedings, as he claimed. He gave to the sheriff a forthcoming bond. But as he was the plaintiff, who would be the person to enforce such bond, and was also the principal in it, he was practically giving bond to himself, in order to get the property out of the possession of the sheriff and into his own. This was a method of getting rid of a former levy, and of the obligation of a forthcoming bond, not recognized by law, and was ineffectual for that purpose.
In the Barfield case, supra, it was said, that, while the surety on the forthcoming bond had a landlord’s lien for rent upon the crops grown upon the rented premises, superior to the lien of the common-law judgment of the obligees in the bond, “yet, in order for him to realize the benefit of such superior lien, under the facts of this case, it was necessary for him to have sued out a distress warrant against Barfield [the tenant and principal in the bond], placed it in.the hands of the sheriff, and demanded that the pro
Suit was brought on the two forthcoming bonds at the same time. The defendant, in order to obtain the opening and conclusion, 'admitted a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiffs, including a statement that the value of the total property was in excess of the plaintiffs’ demand. The defendant surety testified that the cotton would have brought $582.80 on the day of the sale, and that1 the horse was worth $50 and the mule $75. The verdict directed was much less than the defendant showed the value to be, regardless of the value of-the mule. The verdict was not two separate 'findings on the two bonds, ■ but a single verdict based on the former verdict on the issues made by the affidavits of illegality.
Judgment affirmed.