Hester v. Shrouder

13 S.E.2d 875, 64 Ga. App. 572, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 21, 1941
Docket28771.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 875 (Hester v. Shrouder) 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
Hester v. Shrouder, 13 S.E.2d 875, 64 Ga. App. 572, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 477 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

Stephens; P. J.

T. J. Shrouder instituted suit against G. W. Hester and National Surety Company to recover $3000 as damages arising out of certain alleged acts of Hester as sheriff of Jeff Davis County. The sheriff was sued on his official bond ($3000), for the principal and National Surety Company, his surety, was joined as a party defendant. The action was brought in two counts. It appeared from the allegations of the first count that a chattel mortgage fi. fa. was levied by the sheriff upon certain personal property, including growing crops in the field of the plaintiff, as the property of the plaintiff; that the hogs of the plaintiff were allowed by the plaintiff to get into the field and to destroy the crops so levied on, that because of this the sheriff became incensed and obtained, upon his affidavit before a justice of the peace, a warrant charging the plaintiff with “misdemeanor contempt of court;” that the sheriff arrested the plaintiff under this warrant and lodged him in jail; that the sheriff was “grossly careless and negligent” in so arresting and confining the plaintiff; that the sheriff placed the plaintiff in a city jail in a cell with a negro man, which jail and cell were unsanitary ; that the arrest and confinement of the plaintiff were without probable cause and maliciously done; and that the charge against the plaintiff had terminated favorably to him by reason of the return by the grand jury of a “no bill” against him. The plaintiff alleged that the conduct of the sheriff caused him to be deprived of his liberty, and humiliated and embarrassed him, and that such conduct held the plaintiff “up to the world for scorn and ridicule,” and the plaintiff’s health has thereby been impaired, his nervous system shocked, and his general health undermined.

It appeared from the allegation of the second count that the sheriff illegally levied the fi. fa. upon unmatured growing crops *573 belonging to the plaintiff of the value of $3030; that after he levied thereon the sheriff wilfully failed to take care of and harvest these crops, and permitted them to rot in the field; that the loss of these crops was due “solely and wholly to the levy by the defendant upon such unmatured, growing crops,” and his failure to take care of them after the levy, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff has been injured and damaged in the sum sued for. The defendants filed an answer in which, after admitting the formal parts of the petition, they denied generally the allegations thereof and that they were liable as claimed.

On the trial the plaintiff introduced evidence which tended substantially to support the allegations of the petition. The jury were authorized to find that the fences around the field in which the crops levied on were growing were in a state of “disrepair” and insufficient to keep hogs from entering and injuring the crops; that hogs and cattle continuously got into the field before the levy of the fi. fa.; that the plaintiff informed the sheriff at the time of the levy that he had nothing with which to feed his hogs except that which was taken from his field, and that he requested permission of the sheriff to get feed for his hogs from the field, which the sheriff refused to permit; that he informed the sheriff thereafter that there was nothing for him to do but turn his hogs out into the woods; that he told the sheriff the fences around the field were in such a bad condition the hogs would then get into the field; that the plaintiff turned the hogs out and they got into the field; that the fences were insufficient to keep the hogs out; that the entire crop of the plaintiff was permitted to rot in the field, and he did not realize anything therefrom; and that when the sheriff came to arrest him under the. warrant the sheriff cursed and abused him. The plaintiff further testified that after he was arrested the sheriff stated that he “was going to railroad us sorry fellows to the chain gang.”

It further appeared from the evidence that some one reported to the sheriff that the hogs were in the field, and the sheriff thereupon informed the plaintiff that something would have to be done about the hogs getting in the field, as they could not be permitted to eat and destroy the crops levied on; that the sheriff requested the plaintiff to drive the hogs out and fix the fences, and that the plaintiff informed the sheriff that he objected to the fences being fixed or the hogs being put out, and also that his lawyer had told him to *574 run the hogs in the field. One Alexander, a tenant, on the premises under the plaintiff, and who was having difficulty with the plaintiff and the wife of the plaintiff, testified that some one would tear the fences down as fast as he and others could fix them; that he had reported to the sheriff two or three times about being unable to keep the hogs out, and that the sheriff came out to see the plaintiff about once or twice before the arrest was made. The sheriff testified that the hogs were eating up the crops, and that the plaintiff in the mortgage foreclosure proceedings was complaining to him about it; that he made three trips out to the plaintiff’s farm, which was 18 miles from the county site, to see about the hogs, and that the plaintiff told him he was following the advice of his lawyer that he “could tear the fences from around that field and let the hogs eat up that crop,” and he was going to do it. The sheriff further testified: “I thought as custodian of that property it was my duty to protect it, to arrest him [the plaintiff] and stop him from letting those hogs get into the field was the only choice I had; I know they were on my neck and sue my bond. I did all I could as an officer to carry out the law; am under oath, in every respect. . . I swore out a warrant when I arrested Mr. Shrouder, swore out a warrant for tearing down the fences and letting the hogs in.” It appeared from the testimony of the sheriff that he arrested the plaintiff to protect the crop. The plaintiff testified that the sheriff told him he was arresting him about those hogs eating that crop up. The sheriff testified: “All I know, I knew under my bond I had to protect that crop because it was turned over to me.” It appeared from the evidence that Jeff Davis County, the county in which the field was located, was not a “no-fence law county,” and therefore that stock were permitted to run at large, it being incumbent on the people to fence their fields, but not to keep their stock pastures enclosed by fences. It appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff that at the time “the sheriff levied on this crop, he was levying on growing, unmatured crops in the field, it was all unmatured except about 1000 pounds of tobacco.”

The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $2350. The defendants made a motion for new trial upon the general grounds and by amendment added three certain special grounds as will appear hereinafter in this opinion.

It is urged by the defendants that a new trial should be granted *575

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Related

Standard Surety C. Co. of N. Y. v. Johnson
41 S.E.2d 576 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1947)
Cain v. Kendrick
33 S.E.2d 883 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.E.2d 875, 64 Ga. App. 572, 1941 Ga. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hester-v-shrouder-gactapp-1941.