124 Ga. 939 | Ga. | 1906
1. This ease is controlled, by the decision in Owens v. Outlaw, 105 Ga. 477, where it was held: “A possessory warrant does not lie unless the defendant acquired possession of the property in dispute in one of the modes set forth in section 4799 of the Civil Code. Consequently, when upon the trial of such a warrant it affirmatively appeared that the defendant had, without fraud, obtained possession by virtue of a contract with the plaintiff, and the only question in issue was.
2. The present ease is distinguishable from those of Meredith v. Knott, 34 Ga. 222; Hillyer v. Brogden, 67 Ga. 24; Wynn v. Harrison, 111 Ga. 816; and Sheriff v. Thompson, 116 Ga. 436. in those cases there was an agency, and possession by the agent was construed to be possession by the principal. Wrongful taking from the agent’s possession, or refusal on his part to deliver possession to his principal on demand, was held to be a tortious deprivation of the principal’s possession. In Wynn v. Harrison a father permitted his minor son to use a chattel fox a particular purpose, the same principle was applied.
3. The power conferred upon the judge of the superior court, on the hearing of a certiorari from the ruling of a magistrate in a possessory-war-rant ease, to remand the case or give final judgment and direction therein, as lie may see lit (Civil Code, §4807), has no application to a case in which possessory warrant is not the proper remedy.
Judgment reversed.