3 Ga. App. 275 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
Mrs. Boyce claimed a landlord’s lien under the provisions of the Civil Code, §2800. “Landlords furnishing supplies, money, horses, mules, asses, oxen, farming utensils of necessity, to make crops, shall have the right to secure themselves from the crops of the year in which such things are done or furnished, upon such terms as may be agreed upon by the parties.” Her claim of lien was based upon the fact that one William Boyce, colored, was her tenant, and that she had furnished him a horse to make the crop of 1906. She made an affidavit to foreclose her landlord’s lien, in accordance with the terms of the Civil Code, §2816, as follows: “Georgia, Walton County. Before me, J. O. Lawrence, an officer of said State and county, duly authorized by law to administer oaths, personally .came A. P. Boyce, agent for Mrs. S. T. W. S. Boyce, who on oath says that William Boyce of Walton county is indebted to the said Mrs. Boyce in the sum of seventy-five dollars principal and $4.50 interest, which amount is now due, having become due October 1st, 1906, besides interest. Deponent, as agent aforesaid, claims a lien for said debt upon the crops of the present year, now in the county of Walton, belonging to defendant, said crops having been raised upon the land lying in Walton county rented from the said Mrs. S. T. W. S. Boyce for the year 1906 by William Boyce, said debt, being for the use of a bay horse furnished by said Mrs. S. T. W. S. Boyce, as landlord, to the said tenant William Boyce, to make said crops as follows: one bale of cotton in the house now in the seed, all the corn now in the field on land rented from said Mrs. S. T. W. S. Boyce, about two stacks of hay and one lot of fodder, now in the barn on the premises where said -defendant now resides; being for the use of
The counter-affidavit was as follows: “In person appears before me James M. Day, who on oath says that the foreclosure of. the lien in the above-stated case is illegal, and this deponent denies the existence of such lien, and for grounds says: that Mrs. Boyce, the plaintiff in said case, actually sold to the defendant the bay horse referred to in the affidavit of foreclosure, and took defendant’s note for the. same, with a mortgage on said horse to secure payment of said note; that she has now actually foreclosed said mortgage and levied on said horse and is proceeding to sell the same to pay said debt; that this lien .foreclosure is illegal, for the reason that the plaintiff in said ease can not foreclose a lien for 'the use of a bay horse furnished by Mrs. S. T. W. S. Boyce as landlord to said William Boyce, tenant, to make said crop,’ when
• Upon the trial A. J. Boyce testified, that his mother rented land to the defendant, William Boyce, colored, to make a crop in 1906, and that the relation of landlord and tenant existed between the-parties. He further testified, that she furnished the horse, mentioned in the affidavit of foreclosure, to the tenant Boyce to make the crop levied upon, and that when she sold him the horse for the purpose of making the crop it was understood and agreed that the purchase-price was to be paid out of the crop. The witness further testified, that as agent for his mother he notified Mr. Day that she had rented land to William Boyce, colored, and furnished a horse to make the crop, and that her rent and the price of the horse had to be paid out of the crop, and that if Day should sell him anything it would be at his own risk. The plaintiff proved demand upon the defendant, that the debt was due, that suit was instituted within twelve months, that the defendant failed to pay, and that the amount stated in the declaration was correct. The defendant Day' testified only that he was a mortgage creditor of the defendant William Boyce, colored, and that Boyce owed him about $75. At the conclusion of this evidence the trial judge directed a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff excepts to the-judgment overruling his motion for a new trial.
During the progress of the trial the plaintiff offered an amendment striking from her affidavit the words “the use of,” where they occurred before the words “a horse.” We think that the amendment should have been allowed, as its effect was not to substitute, a new cause of action. The action was the foreclosure of a landlord’s lien, and the only effect of the change would have been to allege that what was furnished by the landlord was not “the' use of” the horse, but the horse itself. As stated by Judge Bleckley in Murphy v. Peabody, 63 Ga. 522, the rules of amendment in this ease are as broad as the doctrine of universal salvation. The amendment of the affidavit is permissible; and the affidavit,
The plaintiff in error, however, can not derive any benefit from the error of the court in disallowing the amendment; because the exception thereto is not properly presented. The refusal of the amendment was not proper ground for a motion for a new trial,, and the plaintiff failed to file exceptions pendente lite. Improp'erly refusing or allowing an amendment to a petition is subject-matter of timely and direct exception, but not a proper ground of a motion for new trial. If the ruling on the amendment is set out in the motion for new trial as one of the grounds, and subsequently made one of the assignments of error in the final bill of exceptions, it can be considered, if the bill of exceptions is presented- to the judge within thirty days from the overruling of the motion to amend, but' not otherwise. If the bill of exceptions containing such an assignment of error is presented more than thirty days after the ruling complained of, it comes too late. Bullock v. Cordele Co., 114 Ga. 627.
AS we have already remarked, "the fact that the horse is loaned to the tenant, or even hired to him for a fixed price, if the horse was thus furnished to make the crop, would not prevent the-