12 Ga. App. 676 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
Hubbard sold to Spiers a number of articles of machinery, comprising a part of a laundry outfit, and took from Spiers a series of promissory notes for the purchase-price, maturing at different dates, in each of which it was stipulated that title to the property sold was retained in the vendor until payment of the note. There was no provision therein giving the seller the right to declare the whole debt due on default in payment of a part of the purchase-price. The notes were for $150 each. Spiers paid $100 on the first note, and, after the maturity of the second note and default in payment thereof, Hubbard brought trover for the property. It appears that Spiers had purchased from another person other articles necessary to be used in the operation of the laundry. Hubbard replevied the property in the trover case and took possession of the property, including that which Spiers had purchased from another person] The jury found for the plaintiff, who elected to take the property and its hire, accounting to the defendant for the sum which had been paid on the purchase-price.
Any dominion over property in exclusion or defiance of the owner’s right is a conversion. Liptrot v. Holmes, 1 Ga. 381, 391. “If the act was unlawful; if it was in derogation of the right of property in the owner; if there was an appropriation of the