Chattooga County Bank v. Selman

173 S.E. 465, 48 Ga. App. 488, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 12, 1934
Docket23141, 23160
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 S.E. 465 (Chattooga County Bank v. Selman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chattooga County Bank v. Selman, 173 S.E. 465, 48 Ga. App. 488, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 108 (Ga. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Broyles, C. J.

On February 4, 1930, Chattooga County Bank obtained a judgment against F. M. and John Dodd. On April 28, 1931, the execution issued thereon was levied on mules which, for convenience of discussion, are herein numbered: (1) One blue mare mule, 15 hands high, 14 years old, known as the N. IC. Bitting mule. (2) One bay mare mule, 3 years old, about 14 hands high. (3) One bay horse mule, 14 years old, 15 hands high, known as the John Eivers mule. (4) One bay mare mule, 9 years old, about 15 hands high. O. A. Selman filed his claim to the mules so levied upon. The jury, by direction of the judge, found that mules 1 and 2 were not subject to the fi. fa., and that mules 3 and 4 were subject to the fi. fa. The verdict was in part adverse to both parties, each claiming the right to all the mules; and each party filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled. On these respective judgments overruling the motions for a new trial, the parties assign error in separate bills of exceptions.

In ease 23141 the Chattooga County Bank contends that the court erred in directing the jury to find that mules 1 and 2 weré not subject to the levy. O. A. Selman, the claimant and the defendant in error in that case, showed by undisputed evidence that on February 20, 1929, John Dodd, defendant in fi. fa., executed a bill of sale to the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Summerville, conveying mules 1 and 2, and that on November 1, 1929, that bank transferred the bill of sale to O. A. Selman, the claimant. Therefore it appears that the bill of sale which was executed and recorded on February 20, 1929, and which took the title to the two mules out of Dodd, the defendant in execution, and the transfer of the bill of sale by the Bank of Summerville on November 1, 1929, which placed the title to the mules in O. A. Selman, the claimant, were both older than the judgment of the Chattooga County Bank, which was procured on February 4, 1930; and the evidence further showed that O. A. Selman held the title to the mules at the time the judgment was obtained by that bank. However, the Chattooga County Bank contends that the mules were subject to its fi. fa. because the bill of sale of February 20, 1929, which was transferred [490]*490to claimant O. A. Selman on November 1, 1929, was renewed by subsequent conditional-sale contracts dated February 19, 1931, and April 14, 1932, from Dodd to O. A. & T. H. Selman, a partnership of which the claimant was a member, and that the renewal contracts payable to the partnership, and including additional property, operated as an extinguishment of the bill of sale of February 20, 1929. Since the record shows on its face that O. A. Selman owned these two mules on November 1, 1929, and that the firm of O. A. & T. H. Selman contracted to sell them to Dodd, under a conditional-sale contract retaining title, on February 19, 1931, the ownership of the mules necessarily passed from O. A. Selman to O. A. & T. H. Selman between said dates. However, such change in the ownership of the mules occurred after Dodd had parted with the title on February 20, 1929, by making a bill of sale, and before the execution of the conditional-sale contracts referred to, and such change of ownership was between O. A. Selman, the claimant, and the firm of O. A. & T. H. Selman, and in no way put title in Dodd.

We think the court properly directed the verdict exempting mules 1 and 2 from the levy. They were not the property of Dodd, the defendant in fi. fa., at the time of the judgment or the levy, and Dodd had not owned them for more than two years prior to the levy. On the contrary, the claimant O. A. Selman had acquired title to these mules more than three months before the Chattooga County Bank obtained its judgment, and more than seventeen months before the levy was made. There is no evidence to show that the title to these two mules ever, reverted to the defendant in execution after he parted with it by making a bill of sale on February 20, 1929. On the contrary, the conditional-sale contracts of February 19, 1931, and April 14, 1932 (which were executed after the judgment of the bank was obtained), both specifically provided that the title to the property conveyed should remain in O. A. & T. H. Selman until the note given by Dodd was paid; and that indebtedness was never satisfied, and the bill of sale executed by Dodd on February 20, 1929, had never been canceled or surrendered to Dodd. The case of Williams v. Donalson, 84 Ga. 593 (10 S. E. 1015), cited by counsel for Chattooga County Bank, is differentiated by its facts from the instant case. The Williams case arose upon a rule for the distribution of money. Two mortgages given by the defendant in fi. fa. to Williams individually were ac[491]*491quired by Williams & Company; but the record recites that "the foreclosed mortgage, under which the sale occurred, was given to Williams and Company by Bryan,” the defendant in fi. fa.; and the fi. fa. based on this mortgage was junior in date to the judgment of Donalson, movant of the rule. It was not the older Williams mortgage which was foreclosed, but the junior mortgage of Williams & Company. In the instant case O. A. Selrnan, individually, is the claimant of mules 1 and 2 under a title which he acquired before the Chattooga County Bank procured its judgment against the defendant in fi. fa. He is not claiming under a junior lien as were Williams & Company, but is claiming under a prior recorded title of which the Chattooga Corrnty Bank had notice at the time it acquired judgment and at the time it levied on the property. The court did not err in directing the jury to find that mules 1 and 2 were not subject to the levy, or in overruling the motion for a new trial filed by the Chattooga County Bank.

Mules 3 and 4 were held subject to the fi. fa., and O. A. Selrnan, the claimant, contends that these two mules were not subject to the fi. fa. of the Chattooga County Bank, because Dodd, the defendant in execution, had no title to them, for the reason that at the time of the levy on April 28, 1931, the legal title was in O. A. & T. H. Selrnan, a partnership of which the claimant was a member, under a conditional-sale contract from Dodd, defendant in execution, dated February 19, 1931, and in which O. A. & T. H. Selman retained title to the mules; and O. A. Selrnan’s interest in the partnership was a sufficient basis for his interposing a claim. The Chattooga County Bank contends that a claim filed by an individual can not be supported by proof of title in a partnership, the partnership being a different legal entity.

The contention of O. A. Selrnan, claimant, is supported by the evidence and the law applicable to the state of facts shown by the evidence. The evidence disclosed two very material facts relative to mules 3 and 4: first, that Dodd, the defendant in execution, never acquired title to them; and secondly, that Selrnan, the claimant, did have an interest in the legal title to them. These two mules were not included in the bill of sale of February 20, 1929, from Dodd to Farmers and Merchants Bank. Selrnan claims these mules under a conditional-sale contract and a promissory note made by. Dodd to O. A. & T. H. Selrnan on February 19, 1931 (after [492]*492the Chattooga County Bank had procured its judgment against Dodd), which conditional-sale contract specifically and distinctly provided that, the title to the mules should remain in O. A. & T. H. Selman until payment of the note; and the conditional-sale contract was duly recorded on March 11, 1931, more than six weeks before the bank’s levy was made on April 28, 1931.

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Related

McLarty v. Fulton County
183 S.E. 646 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1936)
Wall v. Humphries
175 S.E. 477 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.E. 465, 48 Ga. App. 488, 1934 Ga. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chattooga-county-bank-v-selman-gactapp-1934.