6 Ga. App. 544 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
The case comes to this court on exception to the sustaining of a general demurrer to the petition. Omitting merely formal parts, we may summarize the allegations of the petition as follows: Guy Sturgis, the defendant, was a bailiff of the city court of Augusta, and in December, 1908, under a search warrant, broke into the warehouse of the plaintiff, “removed some three doors from petitioner’s place of business, though under the same roof,” and seized liquors of the value of $2,500, belonging to the plaintiff. The defendant seized the liquors for the purpose of using them as evidence against the plaintiff, who then stood charged with violating the prohibition law. On February 3, 1909, the plaintiff was tried upon the charge against him, was convicted, and paid the penalty imposed by the court. It is asserted in the petition that “the object for which said property was alleged by said Guy Sturgis to be retained having been accomplished, and there being no further reason or justification in law for the retention of said property by said Guy Sturgis, demand was formally made upon said Guy Sturgis for the delivery of said property to your petitioner, after the conviction of your petitioner as aforesaid, but said Guy Sturgis has refused and still refuses to deliver possession of said property to your petitioner.”
At the outset it may be well to call attention to the fact that it does not appear from the record that the liquors involved in this controversy had ever been used in violation of law, or that the plaintiff’s object in seeking to regain possession of them is that he may use them for unlawful purposes. In these respects the case differs materially from that of Robinson v. Porter, 1 Ga. App. 223 (57 S. E. 993), in which the plaintiff, by his demurrer to the defendant’s plea, admitted that the instrumentalities he was endeavoring to recover were constructed and designed for the purpose of violating