Dunlap Hardware Co. v. Tharp

Georgia Court of Appeals
Dunlap Hardware Co. v. Tharp, 2 Ga. App. 63 (1907)
58 S.E. 398; 1907 Ga. App. LEXIS 273
Hill

Dunlap Hardware Co. v. Tharp

Opinion of the Court

Hill, C. J.

The Dunlap Hardware Company (plaintiff in error) obtained a judgment against Tbarp (the defendant in error) .in the county court of Houston eountjr, on October 21, 1895. Execution was issued, and duly entered upon the execution docket, ■October 30, 1895. Nulla bona was entered upon the execution •on March 11, 1901. The execution docket of the county court, •opposite the entry of the execution, showed the following entfy: “Beturn nulla bona made by sheriff on this fi. fa. March 11, 1901.” Levy of this execution was made by the sheriff on property of the •defendant January 2, 1906, and the defendant thereupon filed an *64affidavit of illegality, on the ground that the judgment was dormant at the date of the levy. The issue thus presented was submitted to the decision of the judge without the intervention of a-jury. The execution was introduced in evidence, with entries, above noted. The entry of nulla bona on said execution appeared as follows: “Georgia, Houston County. Due search made, and no property of the defendant found upon which to levy the within execution. This .the 11th day of March, 1901. [Signed] M. L. Cooper, Sheriff.” Opposite the entry upon the execution docket. Avas the following entry: “Return milla bona made by sheriff on. this fi. fa. March 11, 1901.” M. L. Cooper, the sheriff, testified that he made the entry of nulla bona on the fi. fa., and also the= entry on the execution docket. He did not remember when it AAras made, but he did not make any entry and date it back. This was the only evidence; and the court sustained the illegality and. dismissed the levy.

The only question presented in the case is whether the entry made by the sheriff on the execution docket of the county court Avas sufficient to prevent the dormanc}^ of the judgment. “An entry made by a proper officer upon an execution issued from a judgment, unless recorded upon the execution docket of the court from which the execution issued, will not, even as between the parties to-the judgment, arrest the running of the dormancy statute.” Nowell v. Haire, 116 Ga. 386; 41 S. E. 719. See also Civil Code, §§ 3761, 3762; Smith v. Bearden, 117 Ga. 822, 45 S. E. 59; Palmer v. Inman, 126 Ga. 519, 55 S. E. 229; Benton v. Fish, 1 Ga. App. 656, 57 S. E. 1079. It is contended in this case that the record on the execution docket, relied upon to keep the execution in life, Avas not sufficient for that purpose, under the laAAr, because made by the sheriff, who Avas not the proper officer to make it, and it does not appear that he Avas in any way authorized to make it; because it was not dated; and because it was not a true transcript of the entry on the execution. The proper officer to make-entries on executions on the execution docket of the county court is the judge of that court. Civil Code, §4185. The sheriff has; no authority to make such record on the docket. No presumption, arises as to the regularity of the sheriff’s act in making such record, because he has no authority upon the subject whatever. Regularity in the performance even of. a ministerial act will not be presumed, *65unless the ministerial officer was authorized by law to perform the • act. In other words, the question of regularity in the performance of an act can- not arise where no duty is imposed by law, or authority given by law to do the act. Civil Code, § 3763, requires that the clerk, or proper officer, making the entry on the execution docket, shall date such record- when it is made. In this case the entry on the execution docket is as follows“Return nulla bona made by sheriff on this fi. fa. March 11, 1901.” This date clearly applies to the entry made by the sheriff on the execution, and not to the date when the entry was recorded by him on the execution docket. We do not think this sufficient. The date when the record is made on the execution docket should be clear and unequivocal, for the time of the record upon the execution docket is the all-important fact from which to determine the question of dormancy; the language of the statute being: “No judgment shall be enforced after seven years from its rendition, when no execution has been issued upon it and the same placed upon the execution docket, or when execution has been issued and seven years have expired from the time of the record, upon the execution docket of the court from which the same issued, of the last entry upon the execution made by an officer authorized to execute and return the same.” Civil Code, §3761.

To save the judgment from becoming dormant the statute requires that the entry on the execution must be -recorded on the execution docket' of the court from which the same issued. A substantial compliance with this requirement is essential. What was placed on the execution docket by the sheriff in this case was, not the entry which was on the execution, but a mere statement, according to the sheriff, of what the entry was. The reason for this requirement is that the execution docket must show a proper entry of the sheriff on the execution. The entry on the docket of the words, “Return nulla bona made by the sheriff on this fi. fa. March 11, 1901,” is.shown by reference to the entry on the fi. fa. not to be a correct-transcript. It is true, as contended by the learned counsel for plaintiff in error, that the Supreme Court in many cases has given to the dormancy statutes an equitable construction; but such construction has been limited to those cases where the acts ©f the plaintiff in execution to enforce his execution, by reason,of them public character, served to keep the judgment alive. It has *66never been held by the Supreme Court that entries on the execution can be effective for this purpose when not recorded in the manner prescribed by the statute. In the case of Columbus Fertilizer Co.v. Hanks, 119 Ga. 955; 47 S. E. 224, the Supreme Court holds that, if the act of 1885 (Civil Code, §§ 3761, 3762) means anything, “it is that entries on an execution can not serve to keep-the judgment in life unless the entries are properly recorded.” We think it very clear that the judgment of the trial court, for the reasons stated, should be • Affirmed.

Reference

Full Case Name
DUNLAP HARDWARE CO. v. THARP
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published