52 Ga. App. 460 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
This case is here on exception to a judgment overruling claimant’s motion for new trial. The plaintiff foreclosed a chattel mortgage executed in his favor, and had the execution levied on certain cattle and hogs. The wife of the mortgagor filed her claim, alleging that the property belonged to her. The entry of levy recited that the cattle and hogs were in the claimant’s pos
"Upon the trial of all claims provided for in this chapter, the burden of proof shall lie upon the plaintiff in execution in all cases where the property levied on is, at the time of such levy, not in possession of the defendant in execution.” Code § 39-904. Thus, where the entry of levy recites that the property levied on was in the possession of the claimant, the burden is on the plaintiff in execution. This is a case of a claim interposed to the levy of a mortgage fi. fa. When mortgaged property is levied on under a mortgage fi. fa., and a claim is filed, the plaintiff in fi. fa. must prove title to the property in the mortgagor at the date of _ the mortgage, or malee out a prima facie case by proof of possession in the mortgagor at that time, before the claimant is put to an exhibition of her title. Butt v. Maddox, 7 Ga. 495; Gunn v. Jones, 67 Ga. 398; Southern Oldsmobile Co. v. Baker, 25 Ga. App. 580 (103 S. E. 826); Morris v. Winkles, 88 Ga. 717 (15 S. E. 747); Jones v. Hightower, 117 Ga. 749 (45 S. E. 60). In such a case, where the entry of levy recites that the claimant was in possession of the mortgaged property at the time of the levy, the burden is on the plaintiff to make out his case in one of the ways just stated. "In a contest between the holder of a fi. fa. issued on foreclosure of a chattel mortgage, and a claimant of the personalty covered by the mortgage, where the undisputed evidence shows that the mortgagor, at the date of the execution of -the mortgage, was in the actual possession of the mortgaged property, a prima facie case is made that the property is subject; and where this prima facie case is not satisfactorily rebutted, but the evidence is in conflict as to whether the mortgagor was in possession of the personalty as
The evidence that the mortgagor’s father, some years earlier, had given cattle and hogs to each of his children, including the mortgagor, was not subject to the objections presented. This evidence was admissible for two purposes: (1) it contradicted the testimony of the claimant to the effect that her husband had never owned any cattle or hogs, except some hogs taken in by him on a debt some years before, and long since disposed of by him; (2) the jury might have concluded from this evidence that the cattle and hogs mortgaged were the increase of the cattle and hogs given to the mortgagor by his father.
There was no error in failing to charge the jury the law relative to a married woman’s non-liability for her husband’s debts, and
Judgment affirmed.