49 Ga. App. 29 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
1. A writing which states that the undersigned promises to pay to the payee on a certain date a certain sum of money, with interest, and attorney’s fees if collected by an attorney at law, and recites that it “is given for the purchase-price of the property next hereafter described,” to wit a described mule, and which contains no words from which it could be construed that the title to the mule was reserved by the seller until payment of the purchase-money, but which provides that “to further secure the payment of this debt I [we] hereby sell and convey to the said payee and his assigns the above-described property and in addition thereto the following described property,” describing certain cotton and peanuts to be grown on the farm of the makers, and which contains no defeasance clause or words which could be construed as having that effect, although it does not contain any obligation on the part of the vendee therein to reconvey the property on payment of the debts evidenced thereby, where the vendee does not have possession of the described property, is a bill of sale to the personalty therein described, to secure the payment of the indebtedness therein specified. Brice v. Lane, 90 Ga. 294 (15 S. E. 823); Walker v. Bank of Quitman, 100 Ga. 88 (26 S. E. 84); Ellison v. Watson, 7 Ga. App. 214 (66 S. E. 631); Tremere v. Barfield, 12 Ga. App. 774 (78 S. E. 729); Owens v. Bridges, 13 Ga. App. 419
2. Since the passage of the act of 1921, amendatory to section 3298 of the Civil Code of 1910 (Ga. L. 1921, p. 114), a bill of sale to personalty to secure a debt may be foreclosed as a chattel mortgage, and it is not necessary that the vendee therein shall convey or reconvey to the vendor the personal property covered by the bill of sale, prior to the foreclosure of the same in the manner in which mortgages are foreclosed. The remedies provided by section 3298 and that provided by section 6037 are distinct and altogether independent of each other. Macon Savings Bank v. Jones Motor Co., 168 Ga. 805 (149 S. E. 217); Cobb v. Growers Finance Cor., 40 Ga. App. 442 (149 S. E. 920).
3. Whenever a speedy sale of personal property is made under the provisions of sections 6068 and 6069 of the Civil Code of 1910, it must affirmatively appear that two days’ notice of the applicant’s intention to apply for an order of sale was duly given, unless the case falls within one of the exceptions specified in section 6069. Simmons v. Cooledge, 95 Ga. 50 (2) (21 S. E. 1001); Parker v. State, 166 Ga. 256 (142 S. E. 879); Kirkland v. Gaskins, 20 Ga.
(а) The instrument involved in this case provided that “Should there be perishable property contained herein or property liable to deteriorate in value from keeping and the same is not replevined, I agree that a short order may be granted and a sale had as allowed by law for perishable property, and to that end, and in order to save expense, I also waive notice of application for same.” The property conveyed by the instrument in this case was a mule, which could hardly be classed as perishable property or property liable to deteriorate in value from keeping the same. Such short-order sales are permissible whenever any perishable property, or property liable to deteriorate in value, or property where there is expense in keeping the same, although it is not of a perishable nature, is levied upon. Civil Code (1910), § 6068; Garnett-Carter Co. v. McLendon, 18 Ga. App. 666 (90 S. E. 360). Section 6069 refers to the sale of “live stock, fruit, or other personal property in a perishable condition.” Live stock includes a mule, and may be properly classed as property that is expensive to keep, or as “live stock, fruit or other personal property in a perishable condition.” Pickard v. Garrett, 141 Ga. 831 (2) (82 S. E. 251). This being so, the waiver in the instrument in this case did not relate to a mule, which was not property of a perishable nature or property liable to deteriorate in value from keeping the same, but was rather live stock, which is expensive in its nature to keep.
(б) Without deciding whether the two days’ notice can be legally waived, it follows that as the defendant did not waive the two days’ notice of the intention of the plaintiff to apply for a quick-order sale of the mule levied on, the sale thereof without the giving of such notice was void. See Parker v. State, and Kirkland v. Gaskins, supra.
4. Where the vendee in a bill of sale of personalty to secure debt undertook to collect the debt evidenced thereby by foreclosure of the instrument as a chattel mortgage, and the short-order sale thereunder was not conducted according to the requirements of the statute authorizing the same, — that is, the two days’ notice of the intention of the vendee to apply for the same was not duly given,— and the property was purchased at such illegal sale by the vendee for a smalle/ sum than the secured debt, giving the vendor credit
6. The defendants not having set up or proved any issuable defense to the note sued on, it was not error for the court below to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.