124 Ga. App. 581 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1971
Based upon an accusation for the offense of a misdemeanor in removing encumbered property to hinder a levy thereon, the defendant was tried and convicted. He was sentenced to serve one year in the penitentiary. The appeal is from this judgment and sentence. A motion for new trial was thereafter filed, heard and overruled. The following errors are enumerated, including the overruling of the defendant’s motion for new trial: 1. The court erred in charging the provision of Code § 67-9905 that when a search shall have been made by the levying officer for the purpose of levying an execution and the property described therein is not found at the defendant’s home, if the defendant shall fail or refuse to direct said levying officers to said property, said officers shall enter a nulla bona, and the testimony of the officer, or the entry of nulla bona, when properly proven, shall shift the burden of proof to the defendant; 2. The court erred in failing to instruct the jury upon the law of "intent as a mutual element of the offense charged in Code §67-9902 and the relation of intention to the question of guilt or innocence.” 3. The court erred in overruling defendant’s request to strike a prospective juror for cause as she banks with the prosecutor (Rome Bank & Trust Co.) and has a pecuniary interest in the case through payment of interest to her by the bank on her savings account. 4. The court erred in allowing the solicitor to prove over objection that the defendant had been convicted on five counts of prostitution in violation of the prohibition against placing the defendant’s character in issue and in violation of the requirement that there be "a certified copy or original of the conviction” for same
1. During the trial the certified copy of the chattel mortgage foreclosure proceeding was introduced showing the entry of a nulla bona by the levying officer. There was also testimony as to the residence of the defendant in Floyd County but that defendant was not at this address. Based upon the above, the court charged the jury the substance of Code § 69-9905 as to the shifting of the burden of proof when the property is not found at the defendant’s home, "and if defendant shall fail or refuse to direct said levying officer to said property,” a nulla bona shall be entered and the testimony of the officer or an entry of a nulla bona when properly proven shall shift the burden of proof to the defendant. The enumerated error as to this charge is meritorious, for there was no proof whatsoever that the defendant failed or refused to direct the levying officers to said property. On the contrary, there was sworn testimony by the accused that he was in jail, hence he could not have refused or failed to have directed the levying officers to the property since he was completely unavailable as shown by the entire testimony. The court erred in giving the substance of this Code section in its charge.
2, 3. Counsel failed to cite any authority or reasons to support its claim of error as to these two enumerations. We have examined them and find no error. These specifications are not meritorious.
4, 5. When the defendant was called as a witness he testified that he had made the loan with the bank but had sold it subject to the mortgage and that he had advised the bank who said "it will be O. K. just keep up the payments,” and that he had kept up the payments until he got in some trouble in Atlanta, which
6. While the evidence here made out a case of misdemeanor, that is, the wrongful sale of mortgaged property without the consent of, and with the intent to defraud, the mortgagee, as set forth in Code § 67-9901, the defendant here was charged with a violation of Code § 67-9902 in that he did remove, hide, secrete and dispose of the property conveyed by said bill of sale, so as to hinder, delay and prevent the levying officers from levying on said property described in said bill of sale. The evidence was insufficient to show that he did the above for the purpose of hindering and delaying and preventing levy. The general grounds of the motion for new trial are therefore meritorious, and a new trial should be granted for this reason, as well as those set out above.
Judgment reversed.