54 Ga. 635 | Ga. | 1875
This suit was brought by the state, under an act of the general assembly, approved on the 15th of December, 1871. That act provides that “ money or property stolen from the state or the Western and Atlantic Railroad, or fraudulently or unlawfully detained from the same, and any money or property of which the said road or the state may have been in any manner defrauded, or which is unlawfully detained from the same, or that may hereafter be in any manner unlawfully detained, may be recovered from the person perpetrating the fraud or guilty of the conversion, or from any person or persons or corporation into whose possession the same or the fund may be traced by competent proof (except persons taking bona fide for value, without notice of the fraud,) by a proceeding upon petition filed by the solicitor'general, upon the information of
Under this statute the solicitor general of the Atlanta circuit filed an information against the Scofield Rolling Mill Company, and Lewis Scofield, William D. Cook and Asa L. Harris, and alleged that “ the defendants defrauded the state of Georgia, and unlawfully and fraudulently detain from the same'the sum of $57,156 00, besides interest, in this, that heretofore, to-wit: on the 15th day of January, in the year 1870, and at divers times from that day till the first day of February, 1871, the said Scofield Rolling Mill Company unlawfully and fraudulently collected from the treasury of the Western and Atjantic Railroad, (said road being then and there the property of the state of Georgia,) and from the treasury of said state, the sum of $47,600 00 for five hundred and sixty-two tons of railroad iron rails, pretended to have been furnished by the said company to the Western and Atlantic Railroad, but not furnished in point of fact, but being in excess over and above rails which were actually furnished to the said road, and the said defendants, Scofield, Cook and Harris, assisted in the perpetration of said fraud.” Then follow similar charges for spikes and fish-bar iron, amounting in all to the sum first mentioned. It will be seen that the statute authorizes a recovery : first, for money or property stolen from the road; secondly, for money or property fraudulently or unlawfully detained from the same; thirdly, for any money or property of which the road may have been in any manner defrauded ; and that this recovery may be had from the person perpetrating the fraud, or guilty of the conversion, or from any person or persons, or corporation, into whose possession the same or the fund may be traced by competent proof. Then follows an exception in favor of “persons taking bona fide for value, without notice of the fraud.” It will be seen, also,
In this ease the collecting agent of the Rolling Mill Company, the secretary and treasurer, while employed in his regular business as such collecting officer, made false charges for iron never sold and delivered to the road; and the court charged, in relation to his conduct and the responsibility of the company, thus: “If Cook was an officer or agent of the Scofield Rolling Mill Company, and as such was authorized, in the line of his duty, to collect bills for iron from the Western and Atlantic Railroad for the Rolling Mill Company, and if he, as such officer, or agent, falsely pretended that the company had furnished iron of the description men
The question for us is, under the facts disclosed, ought the Rolling Mill Company to have another trial? We think justice demands it, and the law fully authorizes it. Where a verdict is had by perjury it will be set aside, and a new trial granted : Code, sec. 4467. While there is no perjury here, on the contra
Let the verdict be set aside, and a new trial granted.