10 Ga. App. 760 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
This case is the sequel to that of Booz v. Neal, 6 Ga. App. 279 (61 S. E. 1104). After the affirmance of the judgment in that case, as a result of which Booz was compelled to pay off the fi. fa., he sued Pyle, the seller, for breach of warranty, and the trial judge directed a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor.* Pyle’s defense was that he sold Booz the cotton as agent for one Payne, who was present at the sale, and that Booz knew the cotton was Payne’s, and therefore took the chances, so far as he (Pyle) was concerned, of a failure of Payne’s title. The evidence showed that in 1906 Payne was a tenant on a farm bought from Coker by Pyle, who gave his joint note with Payne at a bank, in order to raise money necessary to make the crop. In the fall Payne had five bales of the cotton ginned in Pyle’s name and delivered to Pyle at the warehouse, the receipts being issued in Pyle’s, name. Pyle went with the receipts to the bank, took up the note which he and Payne had given, and gave his individual note in renewal, hypothecating the warehouse receipts as collateral security. Subsequently Coker levied a distress warrant on the cotton. Pending this levy negotiations were opened for the purchase by Booz from Pyle of a lot of cotton. Coker, having been satisfied, dismissed
Judgment reversed.