3 Ga. App. 356 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The defendant in error sued out a possessory warrant against the plaintiff in error for nine rollers made of black-gum. The justice of the peace, upon the trial, awarded the possession of the black-gum rollers to the plaintiff. The defendant carried the case, by certiorari, to the superior court of Colquitt county; the certiorari was overruled, and exception is taken to the judgment overruling it. It appears, from the evidence, 'that Gay sawed out certain pieces of black-gum and hauled them to a mechanic named Drake, who was to make them into rollers for Gay for $1.25. Some time afterwards, Monk, being in need of such rollers, went to Drake and purchased these rollers from him without the knowledge, consent, or authority of Gay. When Gay called upon Drake for his rollers, Drake told him that he had let Monk have them. Gay thereupon went to Monk’s mill and recognized the rollers in question as being the same rollers’which he had seen at Drake’s shop after they had been manufactured out of his black-gum.
We think the justice properly awarded the possession of the rollers in question to the defendant in error, and that the judgment overruling the certiorari is the only judgment that could properly have been rendered. The uncontradicted evidence of Gay, supported by corroborative circumstances from the testimony of Monk himself, showed that the rollers in question were made from the identical black-gum carried by Gay to Drake’s shop. If the black-gum had never been manufactured into rollers, Gay
The superior court did not err in rendering judgment for the costs and making a final disposition of the case. Hnder the provisions of the Civil Code, §4807, a judge of the superior court, in passing upon a certiorari from a- decision of the justice of the peace in a possessory-warrant case, may make a final disposition of the ease. Bush v. Rawlins, 80 Ga. 583 (5 S. E. 761).
Judgment 'affirmed.