9308 | Ga. Ct. App. | Apr 9, 1918

Brotles, P. J.

George Johnson brought a suit in trover against B. L. Holland and Gilbert S. Holland, to recover a mule. • The undisputed evidence was as follows; The mule had been sold to the plaintiff by the defendants under a duly recorded contract in which title to the mule was reserved in the vendors until full payment of the purchase-money. The contract was executed on January 2, 1915, and the purchase-price was to be paid one day after date. At. the time of the bringing of .the suit, August 5, 1916, only a small portion, if any, of the purchase-price had been paid. Johnson lived on the land of the vendors, and, shortly after executing the conditional contract of sale and obtaining possession of the mule, he voluntarily left his home, without any explanation to his wife and • children, and remained away for several months, his whereabouts being unknown to his family or to the vendors, The inescapable conclusion from the undisputed facts in the evidence for the plaintiff is that he went away to escape arrest under an indictment for selling whisky, leaving his wife unable to care for or to- feed the mule. His wife, having nothing with which to feed the mule, carried it'to a third person and left it in his possession. This third person, who also lived on the vendors’ place, kept the mule for several weeks, when, as he testified, having no .use for it and nothing to feed it with, he allowed the vendors to take possession of it.

■ Under these undisputed facts we think that the plaintiff had virtually abandoned the mule and left it to starve, and that the defendants lawfully obtained possession of it; and as the right of possession, as well as the legal title, was in them, the plaintiff could not maintain his action in trover. This ruling is not in opposition to the- well-settled principle of law that when a vendee is entitled to the possession of a chattel he may maintain a suit in trover for its conversion against the vendor, even though, under .the terms of the conditional sale, the legal title to the chattel is reserved in the vendor. The distinction is that in the instant case the vendee was not entitled to the possession of the property sued for. In our' opinion the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiff.

Judgment reversed.

Bloodwortli and Harwell, JJ., concur.
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