117 Ga. 472 | Ga. | 1903
The Commercial Bank of Augusta filed an equitable petition to foreclose a mortgage against the Georgia Grocery Company. A receiver was appointed to take charge of the assets of the defendant company. Furst Brothers intervened,, and prayed the court to turn over to them 4-J- barrels of whisky of which the receiver had taken possession. To this intervention the bank and the receiver demurred. The court sustained the demurrer, and the intervenors excepted. From the petition of the intervenors and the exhibits thereto it appeared that in December, 1900, tbe president of the company which was the predecessor of the Georgia Grocery Company was authorized to execute a mortgage to secure an indebtedness to the bank. In pursuance of this authority he executed an instrument which, for the purposes of
The judge was correct in ruling that the intervention was insufficient to show that the intervenors were entitled to an attach
In the present case it was expressly agreed between the parties that there was to be no sale unless the goods were sold by the grocery company. No time was fixed within which this condition was to he met. In the event of a sale of the goods by the grocery company, it was to pay the intervenors for them. The sale by the grocery company was a condition precedent to its becoming a purchaser, and until the terms of the condition were met it was a bailee merely. As such it could, under the terms of the agreement, sell the goods to its customers and pass the title; for such a right is not inconsistent with its position as bailee. We consider
Judgment reversed.