57 Ga. 304 | Ga. | 1876
This was a rule against the sheriff of Fayette county to distribute mo.ney arising from the sale of the property of DeVaughn, under a mortgage fi. fa., in favor of Groover, Stubbs & Company, against DeVaughn. The money in the hands
The plaintiffs traversed these allegations in the sheriff’s answer, and the issue thus formed was submitted to the jury, who, under the charge of the court, returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find property enough released by Williams, Birnie & Company to satisfy fi.fa. in full.” The plaintiffs, Williams, Birnie & Company, made a motion for a new trial on the various grounds therein stated, which was overruled by the court, and the plaintiffs excepted.
On the trial of the issue, Groover Stubbs & Company read in evidence a certified copy of a bill in equity filed by Williams, Birnie & Company in the circuit court of the United
The order of the judge, after stating the names of the parties, was, in substance, as follows: “ Ordered that the injunction be granted as prayed for, on condition that the complainants tender to the defendant, the Citizens’ Bank of Georgia, the amount of the judgment within ten days, which tender the defendant shall be at liberty to acceptor refuse. If defendant refuses, this injunction shall be absolute until further order, and if it accepts, it shall signify such acceptance by entering the fact on said fi. fa., and assigning said fi. fa,, and judgment to the complainants, but with no right or power in the latter, to enforce said judgment and fi. fa. against the property covered by the mortgage given on the 30th of December, 1873, to the Citizens’ Bank of Georgia, by M. B. DeVaughn, until after the debt secured by said mortgage shall have been fully satisfied.”
The sheriff stated in his answer to the rule, that at the time this order was granted on the plaintiffs’ injunction bill, that Groover, Stubbs & Company were not parties thereto, not present themselves, and were without any notice thereof. There is no evidence in the record before us which controverts this part of the sheriff’s answer. The bank was willing to make the transfer of the fi. fa. to the complainants, and they accepted the same on the terms and conditions, as stated in the assignment thereof, which was made on the 15th of June,
The court charged the jury as follows :
“ Williams, Birnie & Company bring a rule against the sheriff to show cause why he should not pay over money in his hands raised by the sale of the property of DeVaughn, to the fi. fa. owned and controlled by them, issued from the United States district court, for the northern district of Georgia, in favor of Thomas B. Neal vs. DeVaughn. The sheriff has answered. Groover, Stubbs & Company, other creditors of De
“ The issue before you arises in this way: Groover, Stubbs & Company come in and say that Williams, Birnie & Company’s fi. fa. has no lien on the fund in the sheriff’s hands. They claim that this fi. fa. is extinct or satisfied for the reason,, as they allege, that certain property subject to that fi.fa. has been released by Williams, Birnie & Company. This allegation is denied, and this is the issue: Whether Williams, Birnie & Company’s fi. fa. may participate in the fund and to what extent; whether to the extent of the whole execution or not. If the plaintiff in execution, for a valuable consideration, releases property which is subject thereto, it is a satisfaction of such execution to the extent of the value of the property so released, so far as purchasers and creditors are concerned. The burden of proof is on Groover, Stubbs & ’ Company to show, in this case, the release of property subject to be levied on and sold for the satisfaction of the Neal fi. fa. If Groover, Stubbs & Company have shown it, and there has been such a release that the lien has been entirely taken away and discharged so that the property could not at any time be levied on, then you will find the issue in favor of Groover, Stubbs & Company, to the extent of the value of the property so released. Groover, Stubbs & Company claim that the property covered by the mortgage to the Citizens’ Bank, has been released, and also certain property in Jonesboro. These are allegations, merely, not evidence, and must be sustained by proof, and the burden is on Groover, Stubbs & Company to show what property was released and the value of that property. You are to ascertain what property was released, if any, and its value; and if the release was made, whether for a
“Williams, Birnie & Company, holding a general judgment against DeVaughn, had the right to make their money out of any property subject to it; to levy on any such property, whether in the hands of purchasers or covered with mortgages, and to sell the same. If you believe property has been released and to extent of the fi. fa., and for a valuable consideration, the form of your verdict will be: ‘We, the jury, find the issue in favor of Groover, Stubbs & Company.’ And if you find that no property has been released, then the form of your verdict will be: ‘We, the jury, find the issue in favor of Williams, Birnie & Company.’”
The question which was made on the trial of the issue in the case now before us was, whether the plaintiffs, Williams, Birnie & Company, the assignees of the Neal fi.fa., had released any of the defendant’s property for a valuable consideration, or had allowed funds arising from the sale of the defendant’s property, with their consent, to be applied to younger fi. fas. against him, and to what extent? These questions were fairly submitted to the jury, under the charge of the court, and there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the verdict. It was insisted on the argument for the plaintiffs in error that they were entitled to be subrogated to all the rights of the Citizens’ Bank, their assignor of the Neal fi.fa. Concede that to be so, and the question arises what were the rights of the Citizens’ Bank as the holders of the Neal fi.fa.? Assuming that the bank purchased it to protect its mortgaged property, in what manner could it legally have done so ? The only legal mode by which it could have protected its mortgaged property, would have been to have levied the fi.fa. on other property subject thereto, and had it satisfied, and not levied it on its own mortgaged property, and if the plaintiffs, Williams, Birnie & Company, had taken the assignment from the Citizens’ Bank, of the fi.fa., just as the bank held it under the assignment from Neal to it, then they would have acquired all the legal rights to collect it out of any property of the defendant which the bank had, under its assignment from Neal. But the present plaintiffs did not hold the fi.fa. as the bank held it; they voluntarily became
Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.