84 Ga. 754 | Ga. | 1890
The facts are sufficiently stated in the official report.
1. The provisions of the code under which the ordinary proceeded furnish no warrant or authority for issuing an execution against the owner of goods because they are peddled or sold by sample through an itinerant agent. This question was virtually ruled in Howard, v. Reid, 51 Ga. 328. In that ease it was held that the person to whom the license to peddle is to be granted is he who travels and vends the goods, and that a process issued under section 536 of the code against others on the ground that they, by their agent, peddled, etc. with
Erom what we have said, it follows conclusively that this execution could not rightfully be enforced against the Wrought Iron Range Company. Indeed, as to that corporation it was, and is, an utter nullity.
2. The next question relates to the validity of the execution as against Lee, the person who actually itinerated and exhibited a sample stove for the purpose of obtaining orders in behalf of the corporation for stoves manufactured in the State of Missouri, and to be forwarded from thence to this State in filling orders so obtained. Lee is a citizen and resident of Yirginia, and plies his vocation in Georgia to obtain orders for goods manufactured in Missouri, and not brought within this
The judge of the superior court erred in not granting the injunction prayed for. Judgment reversed.