107 Ga. 784 | Ga. | 1899
The question which arises in this case is, whether J. O. Pye & Co. were such bona fide purchasers of the cotton levied on as entitles them to have the property free from the lien of the landlord. On the trial of the case in the justice’s court, the jury found the property subject to the distress warrant, and judgment was rendered accordingly, to which Pye & Co. sued out a writ of certiorari. On the hearing the judge ordered'that the certiorari be sustained, and, as in his opinion there was no question of fact involved which made it necessary to return the case for another hearing, he finally determined the same and gave judgment in favor of Pye & Co., the claimants. To that decision Holmes excepted. A consideration of the evidence in the record induces the conclusion that the judge of the superior court committed no error in sustaining the certiorari. Indeed, on the controlling question of fact in the..case, the evidence required such a judgment. Under section 2795 of the Civil Code, a special lien for rent on the crops made on rented land is given to landlords, and such liens are superior to all other liens except those for taxes. The same section also gives a general lien on all the property of the debtor. It is to be noted that the superiority of landlords’ liens, as fixed by the statute, is over other liens. In the case of Thornton v. Carver, 80 Ga. 397, it was ruled that a bona fide purchaser, without notice, of a crop grown on rented premises, will be protected against the lien, general or special, of the landlord for rent. It was conceded that the cotton levied on was grown on the rented premises, but it was contended by Pye & Co. that they were bona fide purchasers without notice, and therefore that the property was not subject to the distress warrant. This, of course, was a question of fact. The jury determined it adversely to the claimants. As before stated, the evidence seemed to require a verdict for the claimants, and therefore the certiorari was properly sustained. The judge, however, went further and made a final disposition of the case in favor of the claimants. This we think was error. Under section 4652 of the Civil Code, power is given to the superior court, on hearing the writ of certiorari, to order it dismissed, or return «the same to the court from which it came, with in
In the case of Rogers v. Georgia Railroad Co., 100 Ga. 699, this court held, on a hearing of a writ of certiorari, that “there being some evidence to sustain the finding, but the preponderance of the evidence being against the finding, the judge of the superior court would not have abused his discretion if he had ordered a new trial in the justice’s court; but as the record does not make a case where ‘the error complained of is an error of law which must finally govern the case,’ and as it is one involving a question or questions of fact, which under the law made it ‘necessary to send the case back for a new hearing’ before the justice’s court, it was error in the judge of the superior court to render a final judgment in the case instead of sending it back for a new trial.” And in the case of Almand v. Georgia Railroad & Banking Co., 102 Ga. 151, this court held, that, applying the law laid down in Civil Code, § 4652, the case was one dependent mainly, if not' entirely, upon the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the verdict rendered in the justice’s court; but that it could not, of course, be known with certainty that at another trial in that court the evidence would be the same. The learned judge delivering the opinion
It was proper in this case to sustain the certiorari. The evidence adduced at the trial required such a result, but there is no principle of law involved which must finally govern the case. Its determination depends upon evidence. This being so, it was error to make a final decision in the case. It should have been remanded to the justice’s court for another trial. In so remanding it, the judge of the superior court could have sent with it' such instructions as in his discretion the ends of justice required.
Judgment reversed, with directions.