42 Ga. App. 332 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1930
(After stating the foregoing facts.) A patch' of-ground, whether described as a melon patch, a strawberry patch, or any other sort of patch, is necessarily realty; but an únmatured crop growing thereon, — as an unmatured melon crop, — is, under the provisions of the act approved August 21, 1922 (Ga. L. 1922, p. 114), personalty. It therefore follows that damage to an unmatured melon crop growing upon a melon patch is a damage to personalty, and a suit to recover for damage to such crop, whether it is a suit ex contractu for the value of the crop, or portion thereof taken and converted, or is a suit ex delicto for a sum representing damage to the crop, is not a suit for damage to realty. Conceding that damage to a patch, or to a patch which is of the descriptive character of a melon patch, is, in so far as the damage is to the patch alone, damage to realty, yet damage to a “melon patch,” where the expression “melon patch” is indicative of a melon crop growing on the patch of ground, is a damage to the crop of melons,
The justice of the peace, after the case had been appealed to a jury, erred in sustaining a demurrer upon the ground that it appeared upon the face of the suit that it was a suit for damage to realty and therefore beyond the jurisdiction of the court; and the judge of the superior court erred in not sustaining the certiorari sued out by the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.