Huntington v. Bonds
This text of 68 Ga. 23 (Huntington v. Bonds) 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
The testimony of Huntington was that he sold the four bales of cotton, and appropriated the proceeds by the direction of Bonds, This is flatly denied by Bonds in his testimony, who swears that he never authorized the sale of the cotton nor any disposition of the proceeds. Huntington also testifies that- after he had sold the cotton, he paid by the order of Bonds an account of his due to Ford & Glenn for $48.94, and retained on an account due to himself $13.80, all of which was approved by Bonds.
The jury found that so much of this cotton as was thus sold was sold by authority, and therefore that the plaintiff, Bonds, could not claim a wrongful conversion thereof; but as to the balance, they found that he had wrongfully converted it, and gave him a verdict for the said amount of $37-50. This suit being for one-half of four bales of cotton which are separate and distinct pieces of property, and designated by their different weights and numbers, differs in that respect from the case of Campbell vs. Trunnell, decided at this term, not yet reported, and is therefore not in conflict with it, although that case sounded also in trover.
Judgment affirmed.
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68 Ga. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huntington-v-bonds-ga-1881.