4 Ga. App. 173 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
Henderson, as guardian- of four minor children, brought suit in trover, in Jasper county court, against' Walton. The defendant gave a replevj' bond covering all the property claimed in the suit, and, by consent, the case was appealed, for trial, to the superior court. When the case was called for trial in the superior court, the defendant admitted that he had in his possession certain of the articles described in the petition, which articles he had at the first term tendered to the plaintiff, disclaiming all claim of title. This tender did not embrace all the property described in the petition and the affidavit, there being articles described therein which the defendant refused to tender, and to which he claimed title. On the trial the plaintiff elected to take a money verdict; and, under the evidence, the jury found in favor of the plaintiff the sum of $90. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled.
The evidence, briefly stated, is as follows: Henderson, who filed the petition in behalf of the minors, had been duly appointed their guardian. His wards were the four minor children of the wife of the defendant by a previous marriage. During her widowhood she had had the personal property in controversy set apart as a homestead for herself and these children. After her marriage to the defendant these children continued to live with her, and, at her death, this property was left in the possession of the defendant. She died intestate, and there was no administration on her estate. Before bringing the suit, the plaintiff, as guardian, made demands on the defendant for the property and he refused to deliver any párt of it, hut claimed an interest in it. The plaintiff in error submits for our decision three questions. He contends: (1) that as the heir of his wife, with these children, he was, as to the said property, a tenant in common with them; and as there had been no partition of the property, an action in trover could not he maintained in their behalf; (2) that the verdict for $90, as the value of the property in controversy, was without any evidence to support it, as there was no evidence of any market value of the articles to which the plajntiff was entitled, the evidence as to the value of these articles being entirely fanciful, imaginary, and speculative; and (3) that the court erred in instructing the jury to return a money verdict; because the defendant had at the first term of the court, and in his answer then