Fitzgerald Trust Co. v. Burkhart
This text of 77 S.E. 7 (Fitzgerald Trust Co. v. Burkhart) 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.
Opinion
The Fitzgerald Trust Company delivered to Burk-hart, a mechanic, an automobile for the purpose of having it re[223]*223paired by bim.. Burkhart, claiming tó have repaired the. machiné, asserted his lien for the work done, by a retention of the property, subsequently foreclosing his lien under the provisions of the Civil .Code (1910), § 3366. The automobile, still in the possession of Burkhart, the mechanic, was seized by the sheriff by virtue of the lien foreclosure, and was duly advertised and.sold as provided by the statute. After this the Fitzgerald Trust Company, denying that Burkhart had made the repairs on the automobile as required, and contesting the correctness of his claim for S”ch repairs, brought suit in trover against him to recover the automobilq. alleging that the sale under the foreclosure proceedings by Burkhart amounted to a conversion of the automobile. Burkhart relied upon the defense that the foreclosure proceedings were in every 'respect valid and did not amount to a conversion. The trial court, at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff, awarded a nonsuit.
To meet this exigency, the act of 1884, embodied in the Civil Code (1910), § 3354, was passed. This act amended the statute in the essential .respect that it gave the right to the mechanic, under certain conditions, 'to surrender the personal property and still retain his lien and enforce it in accordance with the provisions of the code (Civil Code of 1895, § 2816; Civil Code of 1910, § 3354). This act of 1884 (Acts 1884-5, p. 43), simply amended the law on the subject as it then stood, by giving the right to the mechanic to surrender the possession of the property to the debtor and, nevertheless, to retain his lien, the language being as follows: “When they surrender possession of the property to the debtor, such mechanics shall record their claim of lien, within ten days after such work is done and material .furnished,” etc. So, as the law now stands, the mechanic does not lose his lien by the surrender of the property on which he claims his lien, but he has a right to assert that lien in two ways: (1) by a retention of the property; or (2) he “may surrender such personal property and give credit,” asserting and retaining his lien by a record of the claim of lien, as provided in the statute. Whether the mechanic asserts his lien by the retention of the property, or by the surrender of possession and record of his lien, ‘he can not enforce his-lien except by foreclosure proceedings under the provisions of § .3366, supra. It may be stated that the method of the foreclosure of these liens has remained substantially the same since the act of 1873.
[225]*225
If the owner or bailor desires to contest the validity of the claim of the mechanic, the statute provides that he may do so by filing an affidavit setting forth thei grounds of his contention, or his denial of the existence of such lien. See paragraph 6 of § 3366, supra. If the owner or bailor of the property, after demand for payment, refuses to make the counter-affidavit, he simply neglects to avail himself of that due process of law which the statute provides for the purpose of testing the right of the mechanic to his lien; and, failing to do either one of the two, it would seem not only that his property is taken from him by due process of law, under the provisions of the statute; but that the deprivation of any right he might have had in the premises is. due to his own laches.
For the reasons stated, we think the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. . Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
77 S.E. 7, 12 Ga. App. 222, 1913 Ga. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-trust-co-v-burkhart-gactapp-1913.