19 Ga. App. 588 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
A mortgage fi. fa. in favor of Hasty & Strickland against J. W. Pruett was levied on two bales of cotton, and Unity Cotton Mills interposed a claim. The verdict found the property subject, and a motion for a new trial was overruled. The issue of fact was whether the cotton belonged to the defendant and was grown on the “Floyd place,” described in the mortgage, or had belonged to his father, J. E. Pruett, from whom claimant had purchased. It was agreed that the claimant bought the cotton in good faith on October 23, 1914. The levy on the two bales was made on November 5, 1914. J. W. Pruett, the defendant in fi. fa., and his father, J. E. Pruett, testified positively and unequivocally that the cotton was raised by and belonged to the latter; that J. W. Pruett did not raise the cotton; that he had no title or interest in it, and that his sole connection with it was to bring the cotton to town for the purpose of sale, at the request of his father; that some of the proceeds therefrom were paid on two accounts owing by his father, and the balance was turned over to him by the son. Eeceipts of the parties to whom these two amounts were paid, of the same date as the date of the sale, were in evidence. The only evidence for the plaintiffs in fi. fa. was that of G. L. Thompson and of Maynard Strickland, one of the plaintiffs. The testimony of G. L. Thompson in full is as follows: “I know J. W. Pruett. I know the Floyd farm which he worked during the year 1914. His land adjoins mine. I know J. E.- Pruett, father of J. W. Pruett. He runs a mill and cotton gin and owns land adjoining J. W. Pruett. The lands of J. W. Pruett and J. E. Pruett are separated by the public road. I remember seeing two of J. E. Pruett’s boys together with J. W. Pruett on a wagon loaded with cotton, carrying it to the gin. They were on the wagon together. I saw this cotton gathered in the field on the
The testimony of Maynard Strickland in full is as follows: “I went to the Pruett home a few days before the levy and talked with J. W. Pruett. He told me that he had about two bales of cotton. I saw the pile of cotton he was talking about on the porch of his house. It looked to he nearly two bales of cotton. Mr. J. W. Pruett said that he would bring me the two bales within a few days. Just as soon as he finished out the two bales. There was about 1,500 pounds of seed cotton on the porch at the time we foreclosed our mortgage. It was levied on. I pointed out the two bales levied on in the Security Warehouse. (It was admitted by attorneys for claimant that the cotton was placed in the warehouse in the name of J. W. Pruett.) I do not know that these two bales of cotton were raised on the J. W. Pruett’s lands. I do not know that' it was raised on the lands covered in our crop mortgage. The seed cotton levied on was not the same cotton I saw at the house on the porch. J. W. Pruett farmed on lands known as the Thompson land and also known as the Floyd land. I do not know whether anyone else worked a part of the.Floyd place. The cotton levied on was ginned at J. E. Pruett’s gin, because his gin makes a peculiar shaped bale.”
1. We think the description given by the recorded crop mortgage, though meager, was sufficient to put a purchaser on notice
2. No principle of law is founded upon better reason or has been more strictly adhered to by this court than that the jury are the proper judges of the weight and sufficiency of testimony and of the credibility of witnesses, .and this court will not disturb .the verdict of a jury where there is evidence to support its findings. Davis v. Kirkland, 1 Ga. App. 5 (58 S. E. 209); Strickland v. Crawley, 1 Ga. App. 139 (58 S. E. 215); Charles v. Brooker, 1 Ga. App. 219 (58 S. E. 218); Daughtry v. S. & S. Ry. Co., 1 Ga. App. 393 (58 S. E. 230). We agree with the following language in the case of Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Hunt, 116 Ga. 448 (42 S. E. 785), in which our Supreme Court says: “We fully recognize that questions of fact are for the jury, and that their discretion as to the facts is a wide one. We believe, also, that they are better judges of the facts than áre courts, and we have great respect for their verdicts. They are often affirmed in eases where it seems clear to the members of the appellate court that if they had been in the jury-box they would have rendered a different verdict. We recognize, also, that the discretion to set aside a verdict on the ground that it is strongly and decidedly against the weight of the evidence is reposed by law in the presiding judge, whose opportunities for determining this question are necessarily very much better than those of this court.”' In the instant case, however, we have been unable to find in the record any evidence which we deem could be properly held to'support the finding of the jury. It will be observed that the witness Thompson does not state that the cotton levied on was the cotton which he saw gathered on the Eloyd place and which he saw carried from there to the gin. On the contrary, he says that the occasion on which he saw this cotton was not more than ten days before the levy, and that in his best ■ judgment it was six or eight days prior thereto, whereas the evidence shows that the levy was made on November 5, and the mill had actually bought the cotton on October 23, a period of thirteen days prior thereto. Therefore, according to Thompson’s evidence, the cotton levied on could not possibly have been the cotton testified to by him, which he had seen gathered' on the Eloyd place. The only other witness for the plaintiff in fi. fa. was Maynard
Judgment reversed.