Phillips v. Dean
This text of 1 Ga. L. Rep. 6 (Phillips v. Dean) 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
In May, while a crop was growing, the owner made a contract of sale of “five bales of white lint cotton, each bale weighing five hundred pounds, of the first pickings of the cotton crop now planted and in a growing condition.” Certain cotton was picked, but before it was ginned and-packed, so as to be -taken possession of by the vendees, a judgment antedating the contract was levied on it.
Held, that the cotton was subject to the levy.
(a ) It is unnecessary to decide whether the contract was a mortgage or a bill of sale.
(b) This case differs from that of Scolly vs Pollock, 65 Ga., 339-There the growing crop was sold in July, and possession was taken of at least a part of it; here the cotton was not conveyed as a growing crop; no particular field or number of acres or of pounds of cotton in gross to be made out of it was specified ; but the sale of bales of cotton. Some of the principles of that case are doubted, and will hardly be extended beyond the facts thereof or similar cases.
Judgment affirmed.
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1 Ga. L. Rep. 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-dean-ga-1885.