137 Ga. 40 | Ga. | 1911
On November 15, 1910, a deputy sheriff levied an attachment, which had been issued on November 6th- from a justice’s court in favor of the Britt-Carson Shoe Company 'against James E. Ricks, on certain personal property as the property of the defendant in attachment,, and on the 4th day of January, 1910, sold it accordingly. On the 2d day of January, 1910, less than four months from the date of the issuance of the attachment, James E. Ricks was adjudicated a bankrupt, and James Fowler became trustee of the bankrupt’s estate. After the sale of the property by the sheriff, the trustee applied to the superior court for a rule requiring the sheriff to turn over to him the funds derived from the sale of the goods upon which the levy had been made. In his answer the sheriff admitted all of the allegations contained in. the petition for rule, except those relative to the title of the trustee in. bankruptcy, set up his want of knowledge on this subject, and answered, further, that he was holding the fund subject to the order of the superior court. The Britt-Carson Shoe Company, the plaintiff in attachment, intervened and asserted a right to the fund. It admitted all of the allegations of the petition, except those relative to the title of the trustee, which were denied. It set up: that the proceeds of sale in the hands of the sheriff were derived from a certain bill of goods which had been purchased from it by Ricks, the bankrupt; that title never passed from intervenor to Ricks, for the reason that he, being insolvent, purchased the goods under specified representations as to his solvency and financial standing, which were false and falsely made for the purpose of deceiving and inducing credit; that, having obtained the goods by deception in such manner, neither Ricks nor the trustee in bankruptcy of his estate acquired title; “that as soon as intervenor learned that a fraud had been perpetrated upon it by said Ricks, by making said false statement, it sued out an attachment for the purchase-money due upon said goods in question, and had as many of said shoes as could be found in the possession of said
By objection to evidence, and motion to strike certain portions of the intervention of the Britt-Carson Shoe Company, and by. exceptions to the finding of the court, the single question was made as to the right of the Britt-Carson Shoe Company to have the fund. The contention was: That, after knowledge of the fraud, the Britt-Carson Shoe Company had the election of two remedies: (a) to waive the fraud, affirm the contract, and sue for the purchase-price; or (b) to repudiate the contract on account of the fraud, and reclaim the goods. That haying elected, after knowledge of the fraud, to sue out the attachment, and cause the property to be sold as that of Kicks, the intervenor should be held to have ratified the sale and to be estopped from repudiating it and claiming the goods or their proceeds in the hands of the sheriff. The position thus taken by the trustee in bankruptcy is sound, and the judge committed error by his ruling. While upon discovery of the fraud the Britt-Carson Shoe Company could elect to repudiate the sale and reclaim the goods or their proceeds (Newman v. Claflin Co., 107 Ca. 89 (32 S. E. 943); Mashburn v. Dannenburg Co., 117 Ga. 567 (44 S. E. 97); Silvey v. Tift, 123 Ga. 804 (51 S. E. 748, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 386)), it was incumbent upon it to do so promptly. After knowledge of the fraud, if the intervenor failed to repudiate it, but did something showing its intention to abide
Judgment reversed.