Hood v. Parker

Decision Date30 September 1879
Citation63 Ga. 510
PartiesHood. v. Parker.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

Judgment. Illegality. Before Judge Simmons. Pike Superior Court. April Term, 1879.

Reported in the opinion.

J. A. Hunt, for plaintiff in error.

No appearance for defendant.

Bleckley, Justice.

On the 12th of November, 1878, a ft. fa. was issued in favor of Parker against Hood as maker, and McLean as indorser, for seventy dollars principal, on a judgment rendered in a justice's court on the 25th of October in the same year. Taking the dates as the record presents them, the ft. fa. was levied upon one bay horse as the property of Hood, on the 11th of February, 1878, and Hood, on the 16th day of the same February, made an affidavit of illegality, giving bond, in terms of the statute, which bond was executed in the presence of a magistrate on February 16th, 1868. On April 1st, 1878, the affidavit of illegality was sustained, and the plaintiff entered an appeal to the superior court. The result of this confusion of dates is, that the levy was made nine months before the ft. fa. issued; the bond was executed ten years before it was needed; the affidavit of illegality was made before the ft. fa. issud or the judgment on which it was founded was rendered; and, finally, the affidavit was sustained and the appeal taken before either the judgment or the ft. fa. had any existence. We infer, of course, that some of the dates are erroneous, unless time in the good county of Pike has become sadly mixed.

In the superior court the affidavit of illegality was demurredto as insufficient in law, and the demurrer was sustained, *the court holding that the matters alleged were not available in that species of remedy. The grounds of illegality set forth were, first, that since the making of the debt sued on, the defendant has been discharged in bankruptcy, and that the debt was provable and actually proved; second, that the defendant appeared in court and proposed to file his plea of discharge, when he was informed by the justice of the peace presiding that it was unnecessary, and that no judgment would be rendered against him—that he might go home and rest content; wherefore defendant left, and had no intimation that judgment had been rendered against him until the ft. fa. had issued; and third, that the judgment was void and of no effect. This last ground is good for nothing because it is too general; it fails to point out why the judgment was void. Most probably it simply embodies the...

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7 cases
  • McKnight v. Wilson
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • April 21, 1924
    ... ... to attack the validity of such judgment, as that would be ... going behind the judgment. Mangham v. Reed, 11 Ga ... 137; Hood v. Parker, 63 Ga. 510; Harbig v ... Freund, 69 Ga. 180; Southern Ry. Co. v ... Daniels, 103 Ga. 541, 29 S.E. 761. But in such case the ... ...
  • Fitzgerald Granitoid Co. v. Alpha Portland Cement Co.
    • United States
    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • September 11, 1914
    ... ... causes anterior thereto." Greene v. Oliphant, ... 64 Ga. 565 ...          The ... Supreme Court held in Hood v. Parker, 63 Ga. 510, ... "To deny that a judgment ought to have been rendered, on ... account of pre-existing facts, is to go behind the ... ...
  • Southern Ry. Co. v. Daniels
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • November 30, 1897
    ... ... equity was available, a petition to set aside the judgment ... would lie. Civ. Code, § 4742. And see Brewer v ... Jones, 44 Ga. 71; Hood v. Parker, 63 Ga. 510; ... Tumlin v. O'Bryan, 68 Ga. 65, 66 ...          Error ... from superior court, Telfair county; C. C. Smith, ... ...
  • Harbig v. Freund & Co.
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • December 19, 1882
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