32 Ga. App. 656 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
M. H. Hunter claimed a lien under § 3358 of the Civil Code (1910) for supplies furnished to a sawmill operated by W. R. Harris, and foreclosed the lien by levying upon certain lumber as the product of the mill. J. A. Tallent interposed a claim of title to the lumber. Upon a trial of the issue thus formed the jury found for the plaintiff.
The evidence is undisputed that Harris operated the sawmill and sawed the lumber, under contract with Tallent, from timber which belonged to Tallent, and that the title to the lumber sawed was in Tallent. The verdict establishing the plaintiff’s right to a lien upon the lumber belonging to Tallent could therefore be sustained only upon the theory that Harris, the person to whom the supplies were furnished, acted as agent for Tallent when' sawing the lumber, or that Tallent by his acts had held Harris out to the plaintiff as Tallent’s agent. The only evidence tending to sustain the plaintiff’s contention on the theory of agency is found in the acts of Tallent in periodic payments of the wages of the laborers of Harris for work done in operating the sawmill during
The verdict for the plaintiff was therefore without evidence to support it, and the overruling of the defendant’s motion for a new trial was error. See, in this connection, Mauck v. Rosser, 126 Ga. 268, 272 (55 S. E. 32); Prince v. Neal-Millard Co., 124 Ga. 884 (53 S. E. 761, 4 Ann. Cas. 615); Lanier v. Bailey, 120 Ga. 878 (48 S. E. 324); Reppard v. Morrison, 120 Ga. 28 (47 S. E. 554); Walker v. Burt, 57 Ga. 20, 21; Quillian v. Central R. &c. Co., 52 Ga. 374; Hull v. Anderson Lumber Co., 17 Ga. App. 40 (86 S. E. 257).
Judgment reversed.