Supreme Court of Georgia, 1886

Ansley v. Hart

Ansley v. Hart
Supreme Court of Georgia · Decided July 1, 1886 · Blandford
1 Ga. L. Rep. 432

Ansley v. Hart

Opinion of the Court

Blandford, J.

1. A marshal’s deed, conveying property sold under a fi.fa. was not inadmissible in evidence because it was signed “James Longstreet, U. S. marshal for the Southern District of Georgia, by A. R. Wright, Dep.”

2. A record showing that a petition had been filed against the claimant of property, by a party not connected with the present case for the purpose of having a ji. fa. which had been transferred to her, by virtue of a sale under which she claimed (title) entered satisfied, and that a consent decree had been taken declaring it not satisfied, was not admissible in evidence on behalf of the claimant, but was irrelevant to *433the issue on trial; but its admission was not such error as to work injury -to either party or to require a new trial.

J. C. Mathews; J. A. Ansley, by brief, for plaintiff in error. B. B. Hinton, for defendant. ■

3. The exceptions to the charge of the court are without merit and the issues were fairly and fully submitted to the jury.

Judgment affirmed.

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