13 Ga. App. 293 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
An execution issuing from the city court of Bainbridge, in favor of Rothschild & Company against W. J. M. Smith, was, on August 9, 1910, levied by the sheriff upon a stock of goods in a storehouse in the village of Eldorendo. Annie M. Smith, the wife of the defendant in fi. fa., interposed a claim. On the trial the jury found in favor of the plaintiff, and also assessed .damages against the claimant for delay. Her motion for a new trial was overruled, and she excepts.
The evidence of the declarations of the defendant in fi. fa., unfavorable to the claimant’s theory, was not objected to. Admissions or declarations of a defendant in fi. fa., made while the defendant is in possession, are generally admissible against the claimant, but not if made after the defendant has parted with possession. Banks v. McCandless, 119 Ga. 793 (47 S. E. 332); Ozmore v. Hood, 53 Ga. 114. The bona fides of the wife’s claim of title rested upon the claim of both the husband and the wife that his stock of merchandise had run down and that what remained had been moved out and replaced with goods bought by the wife. Witnesses who were in a position to know testified positively that no such substitution of stocks had taken place, but that on the contrary the husband simply went out and the wife went in, and took possession of. the stock with which the husband had been conducting the business. The jury had a right to accept this testimony; and, if so, they had the further right to disbelieve the testimony pf both the husband
Judgment reversed.