18 Ga. App. 185 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Holt, as agent for E. J. Willingham, had a distress warrant issued in the municipal court of Macon against J. D. Lanier for office rent, amounting to $150, as evidenced by two rent notes, each for $75, dated July 23, 1912, one due November 1, 1914, and the other due December 1, 1914. This distress warrant was levied upon certain articles of personal property used by Dr. Lanier in his office. Mrs. J. D. Lanier, his wife, filed a claim to the property, and upon the issue the jury found the property subject to levy. The claimant then made a motion for new trial, on the usual general grounds; to the overruling of which the present exceptions were taken.
On the trial the burden which the law placed upon the plaintiff in fi. fa. was carried by introducing in evidence the levy and the testimony of Dr. Lovelace that the defendant in fi. fa. had ■placed him in charge of the property in question, and that at the time of the levy he held it as the agent of the defendant in fi. fa. The burden then shifted to the claimant, who sought to carry the burden by attempting to prove a gift from the defendant in fi. fa. to herself. It can not be held that the jury were not warranted in finding that she failed to prove a gift valid as against the plaintiff in fi. fa. Proof of a gift requires evidence of three essentials,— (1) intention, (2) acceptance, (3) delivery. Civil Code, § 4144. While, under the provisions of the code (Civil Code, § 4145), acceptance may sometimes be presumed, it is necessary that all three of these essentials of a gift be provfed. “To constitute a valid gift of a chattel there must be, not only an intention to give by the donor, but a delivery of the article given, or some act done which will be accepted as delivery.” Burt v. Andrews, 112 Ga. 465 (37