77 Ga. 684 | Ga. | 1886
Wyly & Greene sued out a possessory warrant against Trotti, and in their affidavit to obtain it alleged that the promissory note they sought to get possession of was “taken, enticed or carried away by the defendant, eithei by fraud, violence or other means,” from their possession; or that such note, “having recently been in their quiet, peaceable and legally acquired possession, had disappeared without their consent and, as they believe, had come into defendant’s possession under some pretended claim and without lawful warrant or authority.” On the hearing before the justice of the peace, he awarded the possession of the note to the plaintiffs, and the defendant carried the case by certiorari to the superior court, where this judgment was sustained, and for the purpose of reviewing it, this bill of exceptions was taken and writ of error to this court was prosecuted.
The contention between the parties relates to two subjects. The plaintiff in certiorari, who is the plaintiff in error, insists that Wyly & Greene were never in the legally acquired possession of the note, and if they were, that it did not disappear from their possession without their consent, but that they delivered it to him for collection and took his receipt to account therefor; and that he did not obtain possession of it by fraud, or in any of the other methods prohibited by the statute, but with their full knowledge and consent for a legitimate and lawful purpose.
J udgment reversed.