118 Ga. 913 | Ga. | 1903
Joseph Parantha sued out, in Wilkes county, an attachment against the Cable Company, alleged .to be a corporation of the State of Elinois, returnable to the city court of Washington, and in his declaration he claimed damages against the defendant for suing out, maliciously and without probable cause, an attachment against himself under the Civil Code, § 4543, which attachment was levied on Parantha’s house and lot in the city of Washington. Parantha further alleged that the judge of the superior court, on a hearing at the defendant’s instance, removed the attachment. He further alleged, in his declaration against the Cable Company, that said attachment, being based on charges of fraudulent conduct, constituted a flagrant violation of his rights, and was a gross wrong upon him and upon his reputation, peace, and happiness, and did injure and damage him as an employee whose business it was to attend to important trusts and moneys of his employers, etc.. He claimed that he had been maliciously damaged in the sum of $650, and that he had been compelled to
In the case of Cothran v. Forysth, 68 Ga. 560, which was a-claim case, the claimant admitted possession in the defendant in fi. fa. after judgment, and assumed the onus. At the'close of his testimony, counsel for the plaintiff then announced that they would introduce no evidence, and, after some other incidents of no significance on this question, the court below allowed the plaintiff the opening and conclusion of the argument to the jury. When the question was reviewed by this court, the ruling of the trial judge was affirmed. It is true that Mr. Justice Crawford dissented, but his dissent was based on his contention that the plaintiff had, as matter of fact, introduced testimony by recalling the claimant to the stand; and he closed his discussion of this matter by saying that “the plaintiff was entitled to the conclusion upon one condition only, and that was that he introduced no evidence.” This is the nearest authority we can find for the practice claimed by the plaintiff in the cross-bill. It does not seem that the point we are asked to determine was contested or thoroughly considered. We know of no general practice in Georgia which-gives the plaintiff, introducing no evidence, the conclusion when the defendant has assumed the burden of proof. It seems to prevail in some of the
Judgment on main bill of exceptions reversed; on cross-bill affirmed.