McCants v. Underwood

29 S.E.2d 287, 70 Ga. App. 641, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 18, 1944
Docket30343.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 S.E.2d 287 (McCants v. Underwood) 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
McCants v. Underwood, 29 S.E.2d 287, 70 Ga. App. 641, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 66 (Ga. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Sutton, P. J.

On June 10, 1943, Frances McCants sued out a possessory warrant against Mose Underwood for certain described personal property, which she alleged had recently been in her quiet, peaceable, and legally acquired possession, but which had been taken and carried away without her consent, by fraud, violence, seduction, or other means, and as she believed, had been harbored, received, or taken possession of by Mose Underwood under some pretended •claim without lawful warrant or authority. This possessory warrant was placed in the hands of a constable, who arrested the defendant, seized a portion of the property described in the warrant, and carried the defendant before the justice who issued the warrant.

At the trial counsel for the plaintiff stated to the court that he had been informed that certain items described in the warrant had not been located and turned over to the constable, and asked for an order incarcerating the defendant until such items were turned over to the constable. The defendant objected to the granting of the order, and contended that he could not be legally committed to jail until the court judicially found that the property was in his possession, custody, or control, and that he had failed to produce the property to be dealt with as the court directed. The justice then stated that he would hear the evidence, but would confine it to the production of the articles named in the warrant that had not been turned over to the constable.

On the hearing the plaintiff testified in part, that all of the articles named in the possessory warrant, including those- alleged not to have been produced, were in the possession of her husband, K. C. McCants, before his death about December 15, 1942; that she was his wife, and that a few days after his death she moved from Butler, his home, to her former home in Roberta, and carried with her two parts of truckloads of personal property, which was her own property, and which had never been the property of her husband ; that she had seen certain of the articles described in the possessory warrant, but not produced or turned over to the constable, *643 in the home of the defendant subsequently tó the issuance of the warrant and on the day of the trial; that when she moved from Butler to Roberta, she locked the house and turned the keys over to the defendant. The defendant ‘testified in part that he had owned a portion of the property described in the possessory warrant since 1932; that a portion of it had never been in the possession of his father; that he did not-have any of the articles which he was alleged to have failed to produce in his possession at the time of the trial, nor had he ever had them in his possession; and that he knew nothing about them. There was other evidence, but it is not material to the controlling issues of the case.

The justice of the. peace, on the above, evidence, entered an order directing that the defendant be committed to the common jail of the county, after the expiration of five days, and providing that he might be relieved from such confinement by producing,-within such time, the property which was described in the- order and which consisted of the articles described in the-possessory warrant over which the constable had not taken control, otherwise that he be held in said jail without bail until the property was produced -or forthcoming, to be disposed of as the judgment of the court should direct.

To .this order committing him to jail, the defendant gave notice of certiorari, .and of his intention to apply for a supersedeas; and on June 14,-1943, presented his petition for certiorari to the judge of the-superior court, who passed the following order - thereon: “The within petition hereby sanctioned and ordered filed. Let writ of certiorari issue in terms of law. Ordered that the entire proceedings.be and are hereby superseded until further order of this court. This June 14, 1943.” Notice of sanction and waiver of all other notice and service were acknowledged by the plaintiff and by the justice wdio tried the case. To that portion of the order granting a supersedeas of the entire proceedings the plaintiff excepted pendente lite, and assigned error thereon in the bill of exceptions in this case.

The justice duly answered the writ of certiorari, and transmitted his answer and all the papers in the case to the superior court. The certiorari came on for hearing on October 16, 1943, at which time counsel for both parties agreed for the judge to hear and determine all questions of law and fact which might arise in the case. The *644 defendant in certiorari, Frances McCants, then moved the court to dismiss the certiorari on the ground that the only issue to be considered was the ability of the plaintiff in certiorari to surrender or produce the property describ'ed in the possessory warrant; and that since the judgment of the justice the plaintiff in certiorari had produced and surrendered the property to the constable, who allowed him to give bond therefor, and this bond was introduced .in evidence. It obligated the plaintiff in certiorari to take care of the property and to turn the same over to the constable when called for by him. The judge overruled the motion to dismiss the certiorari, to which ruling the plaintiff in error excepted pendente lite and assigned error thereon. The judge then passed an order sustaining the certiorari and dismissing the possessory warrant, to which the defendant in certiorari excepted.

Before a trial is had on the merits of a possessory warrant, the constable should have possession of all of the property in question. McClain v. Cherokee Iron Co., 58 Ga. 233 (4). The order of the justice in the present case that the defendant be confined in jail unless and until he produced and turned over to the constable the property described in the possessory warrant, was a preliminary order passed for the purpose of getting the property in the hands of the constable and under the control of the court. The issue before the court at the time this preliminary order was passed was the ability and liability of the defendant to produce the property in contest. Code, § 82-204; Nash v. Mangum, 141 Ga. 648 (81 S. E. 883). From an order of a justice committing a defendant to jail for failure to produce the property described in a possessory warrant, a petition for certiorari will lie to the superior court, .where the defendant has the right to demand a trial before a jury upon the issue of fact as to his possession or control of the alleged property, and the verdict of such jury is conclusive on that issue. Code, § 82-301. In the present case it was agreed for the judge to pass upon all issues of law and fact without the intervention of a jury. “In certiorari cases, brought upon possessory-warrant proceedings, the judge of the superior court has full jurisdiction over all issues of fact.” Henderson v. Henderson, 9 Ga. App. 559 (71 S. E. 876). Upon hearing the certiorari in possessory-warrant proceedings, the judge may remand the case or give final judgment and direction therein, as he may see fit. 'Code, § 82-303. Gen *645

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.E.2d 287, 70 Ga. App. 641, 1944 Ga. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccants-v-underwood-gactapp-1944.