59 Ga. App. 568 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
W. E. Hampton on August 14, 1937, in Fannin County, Georgia, swore out an attachment against E. L. Holt, claiming he had been damaged by Holt in the amount of $450 as the result of a collision between his car and that of Holt’s, and that the damage was the result of Holt’s negligence. On August 15, 1937, the attachment was executed by levying it on a Ford automobile as the property of Holt, the car being found in his possession in Fannin County, Georgia. On November 2, 1937, Universal Credit Company filed its claim to the property and gave the statutory bond. Upon ■ the trial in the superior court of Fannin County, after the conclusion of the evidence, the plaintiff moved
Moreover, questions as to the recording or registration of contracts relate to the remedy thereunder and are controlled by the lex fori, which, in this case, is the law of Georgia. Code, §§ 67-108, 67-1403, provide that where a conditional-sale contract is executed on personalty not within the limits of this State, and such property is afterwards brought into the State, the contract (where the purchaser of the property is' a non-resident of the State) shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of the county in which the property is found, and so recorded within six months after it is so brought in. “The recording laws of a. State only embrace personal property within that State; they affect only the rights of persons dealing with property situated in that State,
The controlling question in the instant case being whether the claimant’s conditional-sale contract was recorded as required by the registration statutes of Georgia, and the undisputed evidence showing that it was so recorded in the county of this State into which the property was casually brought, and so recorded within six months from the execution of the contract and the bringing of the property into Georgia, the court did not err in directing a verdict for the claimant. The fact that the contract was not so recorded before the institution of the attachment proceedings is immaterial. “The effect of a statute prescribing a time limit for the recording of instruments 'is that if the instrument is recorded within that time, the record, and consequently the notice imported thereby, relates back to the time of the execution of the instrument. . . Had the plaintiff recorded its mortgage within the six-months period, the notice implied by the record would have related back to the execution of the instrument, antedating the purchase by the defendant, and it would have of necessity prevailed in the present action.” Armitage-Herschell Co. v. Muscogee Real Estate Co., 119 Ga. 552 (46 S. E. 634). In Malone & Grant Co. v. Hammond, 6 Ga. App. 114, 119 (64 S. E. 666), where a mortgage on a mule was executed in Alabama, and the mule was subsequently brought into Georgia, and the mortgage was never recorded in this State, this court held: “The defendants not having recorded their mortgage within the six months, as provided by our Code section, supra, and the.plaintiff haying bought the mule in good faith in the State of Georgia from one who' had possession of it and who claimed title thereto, the plaintiff must be protected as an innocent purchaser without notice.”
Judgment affirmed.