Grice v. Haskins
This text of 73 Ga. 700 (Grice v. Haskins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
One Lovett purchased of Roberts & Gurr a mule named “ Babe,” at the price of $194, and paid them in cash one [702]*702hundred dollars of this amount, giving them his note for $94, by the terms of which the title to the mule was to remain in Roberts & Gurr until it was fully paid for. At the same time, Lovett gave Roberts & Gurr a mortgage upon another mule named “Mollie,” as a further security for the payment of the note. The note and mortgage were both written on the same sheet of paper; both were duly attested by E. C. Smith, a notary public of Pulaski county; both bore the same date, and were duo on the first day of November, 1883, and both were duly recorded within time (the entry of record on February 16th, 18S4, as it appears in the record, is a mistake-in copying; it should have been 1883, as was admitted by both parties on the hearing in this court, and as is apparent from other parts of the record). Lovett was committed to jail on the 6 th day of June, 1883, and on the 8th day of that month, he directed Roberts to take possession of the mule, Babe, surrendering to him his right to redeem the same. Roberts applied to Harkins, who had possession of the mule, to deliver her up, but Harkins at first declined to do so ; he subsequently, however, on the same occasion, made an arrangement with Roberts (who had become the sole owner of the note and mortgage, by an agreement with his partner) by which he paid him the full amount of the note and took from him a written transfer and assignment of the mortgage; this transfer was dated 8th of June, 18S3. On the 2d day of August, 1883, Lovett executed a mortgage to Grice <& Ryan, conveying to them “ one bay mare mule named ‘ Babe,’ bought from W. M. Roberts, of Hawkinsville, Ga.,” to secure the payment of a note of the same date given by Lovett to them. This mortgage was foreclosed, and an execution issued on the judgment of foreclosure on the 4th day of August, 1883, which was levied on the mortgaged property two days thereafter. To this levy Harkins interposed his claim, and upon the trial of the issue thus formed, the jury found the property not subject, and the plaintiffs, Grice & Ryan, made a motion for a new trial upon various [703]*703grounds, which was refused, and they brought the case here for review.
It is not necessary to set out specifically and in detail the several grounds of this motion, as, in the view we take? most of them are inapplicable to the case as made by the evidence.
The other question made, that the court erred in refusing to entertain the equitable claim set up by the plaintiffs in this proceeding, if erroneous in this view, was error that did not hurt. Whether the claim, if properly pleaded, would have been available, see 55 Ga., 348, and citations; 54 Id., 690, 691.
Judgment affirmed.
The note and mortgage were on the same sheet of paper; on the back of it was indorsed an entry thatit was recorded. All of this was on the back of the mortgage, except a smaM portion which extended over the s’gnature of the note. (Rep.)
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
73 Ga. 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grice-v-haskins-ga-1884.