Davis v. Davis
Davis v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
Samuel Davis died testate, and in his will authorized the sale of his lands by his executor. The executor died and W. M. Davis qualified as administrator with the will annexed. Under the power in the will, and without an order of the court of ordinary, the administrator, after having duly advertised a certain tract of land, sold it at public auction, and it was bid off by W. P. Davis. The administrator cried the sale himself. There was no contract, memorandum, or writing signed by any one in connection with the sale, nor was anything then done in pursuance. thereof. There was no money paid nor papers drawn. Some months thereafter the administrator brought suit against W. 'P. Davis and prayed for a judgment for the amount of the bid. The defendant pleaded that he was not liable, because “ the so-called sale was void, for the reason that it was a contract for a sale of land,
The attorneys for both sides agree that the only question for determination is whether or not the sale in this case was a judicial one. What is a judicial sale ? The answer to this question is found in 24 Cyc. 6, and is as follows: “A judicial sale is one made under the process of a court having competent authority to order it, by an officer legally appointed and commissioned to sell; one made by a court of competent jurisdiction, in a pending cause through its authorized agent. A sale under an order or decree of court is a judicial act. The court is the vendor, and the officer conducting the sale is the mere agent of the court. The sale is a transaction between the court and the purchaser. A sale is not a judicial sale, properly speaking, unless it is one made on an order of the court and subject to confirmation by the court.” Counsel for plaintiff in error cite and rely on Green v. Freeman, 126 Ga. 274 (55 S. E. 45, 7 Ann. Cas. 1069), in which it is said: “No note or memorandum in writing is necessary to charge either the administrator or purchaser at any administrator’s sale.” This language is broad, and seemingly would cover “any administrator’s sale,” but in that case the Supreme Court was discussing § 6071 of the Civil Code of 1910, which is in part as follows: “Any person who may become the purchaser of any real or personal estate at any sale which may be made at public outcry by any executor, administrator or guardian,, or by any sheriff or other officer under and by virtue of any execution or other legal ;process ” (italics ours); and after quoting that section the court said (p. 277): “ No memorandum in writing is necessary to charge the purchaser under the provisions of this section.” The sale in that case was a “ judicial ” one because made in compliance with an order or judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. In Harwell v. Foster, 102 Ga. 38 (28 S. E. 967), the Supreme
The judge properly granted a nonsuit, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.