15 Ga. App. 674 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
L. V. Cash, the owner of an automobile, which he left at a certain garage in Tifton, found, on his return to that place after an absence of several weeks, that the machine had been levied upon by the bailiff of a justice's court, under and by virtue of a pretended writ of attachment, and that, at a void sale had thereunder, it was purchased by one G. S. Nelson (in good faith, so far as the record discloses) for $100. It appears that after Nelson had kept and used the car, replacing burst tires and making various repairs, he sold it to Woodham for $110, having expended altogether $30 or $40 on the machine without making it run successfully. An action of trover for the ear was brought against- Woodham by Cash. On the trial the evidence showed that Woodham expended $129 in repairing the car, in addition to the
There was evidence from which the verdict rendered, or from which perhaps different verdicts, would be authorized, according to the testimony which the jury might have elected to believe; so it is unnecessary to discuss the general grounds of the motion for a new trial, even if it were here insisted that the verdict was without sufficient evidence to support it. The only point for decision, then, is whether the court gave to the jury the correct rule as to the
In the instant ease we may assume, for the sake of the argument, that the automobile in question was actually worth, at the time it was converted by the illegal levy -of the bailiff, $800, as estimated by the plaintiff, and yet, even had the original purchaser at the constable’s sale (Nelson) acted in bad faith in making the purchase, why should Woodham, who bought from him in good faith 30 days later, be held to account in a suit brought against Wood-ham alone for'the full sum of $800, where his predecessor Nelson bad decreased the value of the machine during the 30 days he had it in his possession, and in point of fact it was actually worth only $110 at the time Woodham acquired the possession or converted the automobile to his own use? In other words,, conceding that the machiné had deteriorated between the time it was unlawfully seized by the constable and the time when Woodham in good faith
In our opinion the court erred in giving the measure of damages set out in the excerpt complained of.
Judgment reversed.