15 Ga. App. 377 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
Central Grocery Company brought an action in trover against George Baker for the recovery of a car-load of oats, approximately 1,000 bushels, of the value of $635. The testimony adduced on the trial was as follows: B. Y. Wallace, for the plaintiff, testified: I was called over the phone by E. P. Searcy, who stated that his firm had a car of oats in Tifton, shipped to Mr. George Baker, that Baker had refused them as being off grade, and asked me to make an offer for them. I examined the oats and made him an offer. He accepted it and directed me to go to the National Bank of Tifton and take up the draft and bill of lading. I immediately gave Floyd Guest a cheek for the amount and sent him to the bank, and he returned with the draft and bill of lading for the oats. A little while after that Mr. K P. Baker, assistant cashier of the bank, came to my office and requested to see the bill of lading, and it was handed to him for inspection. He then handed back the check I had given him for the oats and left with the draft and bill of lading. The price of oats on that day for the same grade of oats and kind was 10 cents per bushel more than the price I paid Searcy for them. The car contained approximately
As will be seen from reading the statement of facts above, the evidence was devoid of details, and was in fact very limited as to the material issues. We are of the opinion, however, that the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff did not require a new trial. The evidence, to our minds, clearly shows that the title to the car of oats had passed to the plaintiff. The consignor of the car testified that he sold, and the plaintiff’s main witness (and presumably its agent) that he bought, the oats for the plaintiff. The bank cashier testified that he accepted the check in payment for the bill of lading, and delivered to the plaintiff the bill of lading with the •draft attached. The bill of lading was a symbol representing the goods themselves, and its delivery was delivery of the goods themselves. Raleigh &c. v. Lome, 101 Ga. 320 (28 S. E. 867). It was not necessary, as contended by the plaintiff in error, that the original consignor transfer the bill of lading to the grocery company in writing. Title to the goods had never passed out of the original shipper (Civil Code, § 4134) and the defendant, at that time, had no right to possession. The goods had been shipped to the consignor’s order, with a draft attached. He sold the goods to the grocery company, and the grocery company, upon paying the draft, was entitled to the bill of lading representing the goods. When the bank delivered the bill of lading and received payment of the draft, title passed. A bill of lading may be transferred by delivery. Orr v. Planters Phosphate Co., 8 Ga. App. 60 (3), 63-4 (68 S. E. 779); Hale on Bailments, 127. The plaintiff, therefore, had not only the title to the goods, but also the possession or right of immediate possession thereof. The plaintiff then having title and the áefendant none, by what right did Baker, the banker, after accepting the plaintiff’s check in payment for the bill of lading and delivering it to
Under the evidence the plaintiff had the right to elect to take a verdict for the property itself or for its value at the time of the conversion, with interest, or its highest market value proved since the conversion. There is nothing in the record to show what kind of verdict the plaintiff elected to take, or that it elected to take any, but it is inferable, from the verdict rendered and the judgment entered, that there was an election to take a money verdict. Wolf v. Kennedy, 93 Ga. 230 (18 S. E. 433). Let us see then if there was anything on which to' base the verdict actually rendered. The plaintiff, in its petition, alleged that the oats sued for were of the value of $635, and the defendant in his answer did not deny this allegation. It is contended, however, that there was no testimony whatever as to value and that the direction of a verdict was illegal. As we have already stated, the plaintiff was entitled, if it chose, to have a verdict for the property. There is evidence that the grocery company had a “profit in the deal, of $100/’ We can see no other version of this testimony than that the plaintiff, when it bought the oats in question, bought them for $100 less than their value on the day of sale. The day of sale was the day of the conversion. This testimony was not objected to on the trial nor controverted by any
Judgment affirmed.