Grumbine, a merchant doing business as the Guyton Motor Company, in order to secure a debt executed to the Citizens & Southern Bank a bill of sale to the automobile in question. The paper was duly recorded. The bank knew Guyton was a dealer in automobiles and that the automobile would be sold in the regular course of trade. Thereafter Archer, a bona fide purchaser, bought the automobile from Grumbine in due course of trade, paid part of the purchase-price down and gave a conditional bill of sale to secure the balance. Grumbine transferred this conditional-sale contract to the Commercial Credit Corporation, on the same date, with notice that the car had been thus bought from Grumbine in due course of trade. The bank foreclosed its paper and levied on the automobile, which was in the possession of Archer. Archer filed a claim, on the trial of which the jury found against him. He moved for a new trial which was overruled “and *394 the ease went no further.” As to that claim the ruling became the law of the case, irrespective of what the law of the State might be. The Commercial Credit Corporation then filed a claim to the automobile; the bank filed a plea of res judicata, which the judge, overruled; the case went to trial and the jury found in favor of the bank. The Commercial Credit Corporation excepted to the overruling of its motion for new trial, and the bank excepted by cross-bill to the overruling of the plea of res judicata.
1. We will first take up the exception to the overruling of the plea of res judicata raised by the cross-bill. The Code, § 110-501, provides:
“A
judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction shall be conclusive between the same parties and their privies as to all matters put in issue, or which under the rules of law might have been put in issue in the cause wherein the judgment was rendered, until such judgment shall be reversed or set aside.” The parties to the present claim case are unquestionably not the same parties who were before the court in the Archer claim case, and if the Commercial Credit Corporation was not a privy with Archer, within the meaning of the Code section quoted, the court did not err in overruling the plea. “Privity in estate denotes . . mutual or successive relation to the same right of property; identity of title to an estate.” 50 C. J. 407, § 3. “ ‘The general meaning of privies includes those who claim under or in
right
of parties.’ Lipscomb
v.
Postell,
2. We
now come to the question raised by the main bill of exceptions — whether the evidence supported the verdict. It may be well to note that our Supreme Court has said that the objects of a mortgage and a bill of sale to personalty to secure a debt under the provisions of the Code, § 67-1401, are identical as to security for debt, and in the following language has stated how very similar they are in their nature: “There is a technical difference between a mortgage and a security deed or bill of sale as provided for in the above-quoted sections of the Code, that difference being that the mortgage does not convey title but cis only security for a debt’ [§§ 67-101, 67-103] or a lien [§ 67-1701], whereas a deed to secure debt does convey legal title to property for the purpose of affording security for a debt. In such instance the grantor retains the right of possession of the property and the right to redeem the legal title by paying the debt. . . The objects of a mortgage and security deed and a bill of sale to secure personalty under the provisions of the Code are identical-security for a debt. While recognizing the technical difference between a mortgage and security deed hereinbefore pointed out, this court has treated deeds to secure debts and bills of sale to secure debts as equitable mortgages.”
Merchants & Mechanics Bank
v. Beard, 162
Ga.
446, 449 (
In the instant ease neither the Citizens & Southern Bank nor *397 the Commercial Credit Corporation was ever in fact a buyer of the automobile from an owner or any one else. They were in truth and in fact only creditors, séeking to secure the payment of their respective debts, the former by a bill of sale to secure debt and the latter by a conditional-sale contract to secure debt. The bill of sale to secure debt of the- Citizens & Southern Bank had priority over the conditional-sale contract to secure debt of the Commercial Credit Corporation, the former being dated and duly recorded before the latter.
The judge did not err in overuling the motion for a new trial.
Judgments affirmed.
