The plaintiff in error brought trover against the Blakely Gin Company, to recover a bale of cotton. At the conclusion of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendant, and this is the error assigned. When the case was called in this coiirt a motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that there was no exception to any final judgment, “but only to the interlocutory action of the judge in directing the jury to return a verdict.**
1. There is no merit in this motion. It has been repeatedly held by the Supreme Court and this court that the direction of a verdict is such a final judgment as will support a bill of exceptions. Meeks v. Meeks, 5 Ga. App. 394 (63 S. E. 270); Duggan v. Monk, 5 Ga. App. 206 (62 S. E. 1017), and citations; Powell v. Pennington, 118 Ga. 494 (45 S. E. 272); Scarborough v. Holt, 127 Ga. 256 (56 S. E. 293).
2. The undisputed evidence shows that the bale of cotton was delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant for the purpose of having it ginned, and that the plaintiff made a demand on the defendant for the cotton, and the defendant refused to deliver it to him or to pay him its value. Indeed, the defendant admits these facts, but defends on the ground that it had nothing to do with the cotton except to gin it, and, after it was ginned, to place it on a platform, from which it was to be afterwards hauled by a drayman of the Farmers* Warehouse to the warehouse, where it was to be held subject to the order of the plaintiff; and in support of "this defense evidence was introduced, to the effect that the plaintiff, when the cotton was delivered to the defendant, instructed the defendant to send to the Farmers* Warehouse, when the cotton was ginned and baled, the coupons calling for it. The plaintiff denied that he had given any such instructions.
Under these facts the defendant insisted in the court below, and insists here, that no conversion of the cotton was shown, and that the plaintiff failed to carry the burden which the law imposed upon him of proving the conversion; that the proper remedy was
Judgment reversed.