
    Allagood, sheriff, et al. v. Cook.
    Where two parcels of land, one of which, according to the evidence, was worth from $75 to $300, and the other from $500 to $2,000, were levied on to satisfy an execution amounting to $105, and after the sale of the former for $75, the latter was sold, subject to a mortgage of $500, to pay the balance of the execution, and brought only $5, the defendant in fi. fa. being present at the sale and making no obj ection thereto, the levy, though at first glance apparently excessive, was, when tested by the actual results, not so in fact, provided the sale was fair and free from fraud; and no fraud appearing, the court erred in granting an injunction, at the instance of the defendant in ft. fa., restraining the sheriff from putting the purchaser of the latter parcel in possession.
    July 17, 1893.
    Petition for. injunction, etc. Before Judge Smith. Telfair county. April 19, 1893.
    DeLacy & Bishop, for plaintiffs in error.
   Judgment reversed.  