5 Ga. App. 847 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
(After stating the foregoing facts.) No brief is submitted for the defendants in error, and we do not know upon what theory of the law the trial judge based his judgment. In our opinion, the allowance of the plea and the direction of a verdict for the defendants were manifestly erroneous. The notes sued on recite that they are given for the purchase-money of certain personal property named therein, to which title is reserved until the property shall be fully paid for. The notes were payable to the order of J. E. Durden, and were transferred by him, by written indorsement, to the plaintiff, before maturity. If the allegations of the plea, above set out, are true, they constitute no defense. The conduct of the plaintiff, relied upon as a defense, is wholly insufficient for that purpose; for two reasons: First, the appeal by the plaintiff from the judgment of nonsuit as to the makers carried up the entire case, and the judgment against the indorser was suspended until the termination of the appeal. Hanie v. Taylor, 4 Ga. App. 545 (61 S. E. 1054). The issuance of the fi. fa. based on the judgment rendered by the county court against the indorser, and the seizure of the personal property and bringing it to sale thereunder, were mere nullities, by which the plaintiff gained nothing and the defendants lost nothing.- Civil Code, §§4469, 4470, 5340, 4462; Carter v. Buchanan, 2 Ga. 337; Lewis v. Armstrong, 69 Ga. 752. In other words, the appeal suspended the judgment against the indorser, and no execution could be legally issued thereon until the final ending of ' the appeal ease. Second, the seizure of the property under the fi. fa. issued on the judgment rendered by the county court against the indorser was a mere nullity for another reason. When the purchase-money notes containing the reservation of title to the personalty therein named' were transferred by the payee as indorser, the transfer carried with it the security for their payment. The legal title to the property was transferred from the payee to the purchaser of the notes; but the equitable title to the property remained in the makers of the notes. The holder of the notes became the legal transferee of the title of the payee to both the notes and the security mentioned therein. Acts 1887, p. 62; Cade v. Jenkins, 88 Ga. 791 (15 S. E. 292). When the property was seized and sold under a fi. fa. against the payee of the notes, nothing was-sold except his title, and this title he had already transferred to the