19 Ga. App. 80 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Two mules were levied upon as the property of W. E. Mason, under an execution based upon a judgment against him in favor of Dickerson, obtained in April, 1915, and a claim to the property was interposed by Mrs. Bryant. The claim affidavit was made by the defendant, Mason, as "agent” for Mrs. Bryant, and her name was signed to the claim bond as principal “by W. E. Mason, agent.” On the trial the defendant in fi. fa. testified, that on November 7, 1914, he sold the mules levied upon to the claimant, the consideration being money which the claimant advanced to him to complete the payment of the purchase-price of the mules, and money previously borrowed by him from the claimant to make his crop during the year 1914; that on the same day the claimant sold the mules back to him, with a two-horse wagon and harness, taking therefor a retention-of-title note for $600, due October 1, 1915, as he had rented lands from the claimant, who was a sister of his wife, and expected to use the mules on her lands, where he lived during the year 1915, with the understanding that he was to keep and work them and make the money to pay the claimant what he owed her. The retention-of-title note was duly recorded November 14, 1914. So far as the record discloses, the claimant herself did not testify on the trial of the claim case, and there is nothing to indicate that she was even present at the trial, but seemingly the defendant in fi. fa. was the sole person interested for the claimant in the outcome of the trial, except the attorney who nominally at least represented her. It will be observed that while the defendant in fi. fa. testified
A claim case is in the nature of an equitable proceeding, and, where transactions between relatives are under review, slight circumstances are often sufficient to induce belief on the part of a jury that there was fraud or collusion between the parties, and authorize them to find against the claimant and in favor of the plaintiff in fi. fa. A claimant must, generally speaking, come into court with hands unstained by any suggestion' of collusion with the defendant in fi. fa. to defeat or defraud the creditors of the latter; and a claimant who fails to make a clear showing of both legal and moral right to the property in dispute must generally suffer the loss thereof at the hands of a jury, if there be any circumstances in proof, even though slight, which may be sufficient to authorize the inference of fraud or collusion. The fact that the claim affidavit and bond in this ease were not made by the elaimapt herself, nor by her attorney of record, but were signed by the defendant in fi. fa. as her professed “agent” (notwithstanding that a defendant in fi. fa. is presumed to be interested in the payment of his debts, and therefore to be upon the side of the plaintiff in fi. fa. rather-than upon that of the claimant), and the further fact that the claimant did not appear as a witness in the case, and was not sufficiently interested in the result to attend the trial thereof (so far as is disclosed by the record), are significant. In addition to this, the lack of definiteness and certainty in the testimony of the defendant in fi. fa., who appeared as the sole witness for the claimant, as to the amount he procured from his sister-in-law, and as to what in fact he actually owed her at the time he sold to her the mules in November, 1914, was a circumstance tending to support the finding of the jury that the transaction between the defendant in fi. fa. and the claimant was not bona fide, but that its purpose was to aid her to escape the payment of the debt due Dickerson, which, though not then in judgment, was for goods sold to the defendant in fi. fa. during the years 1912 and 1913, and was then probably long past due, and perhaps to the eye of the defendant-in fi. fa. an impending evil
Judgment affirmed.