Phillips v. Taber

10 S.E. 270, 83 Ga. 565, 1889 Ga. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 10 S.E. 270 (Phillips v. Taber) 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.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Taber, 10 S.E. 270, 83 Ga. 565, 1889 Ga. LEXIS 113 (Ga. 1889).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

It appears from the record in this case that Theodore S. Taber, on the 2d of June, 1887, by his next friend, Mary C. Taber, commenced his action of trover against Phillips, for certain personal property mentioned in his declaration; that on the same day, he sued out bail process against said Phillips; that on the 3d of June, Phillips gave bond and security for the forthcoming of said property, and for the eventual condemnation money which might be assessed against him on the trial of the case. On the 27th of June the sheriff applied to the court for leave to sell the wagon and harness and one shawl, as perishable property, and stated in his application that the same had not been replevied by Phillips. The order was granted, and he sold the same for $10, which was applied in payment of the costs of the case. On July 27th, Phillips filed a plea of the general issue, which plea was signed by W. R. Hodgson, the defendant’s attorney. On February 13th, 1888, the declaration in trover was amended by striking therefrom the name of Mary C. Taber, who sued as next friend, the amendment alleging that the plaintiff had become of age since the filing of the declaration. The declaration was further amended at the same time by inserting therein the names of Taber’s wife, Eva C. Taber, and his child, Frank S. Taber, “said -wife and child being the beneficiaries of the homestead estate of which the property sued for in said action was a part, and the plaintiff sues for the use of said wife and child.” On February 18th, 1888, service of this amendment was acknowledged and copy waived by Hodgson, the defendant’s attorney. On October 16th, 1888, the declaration was further amended by alleging that the hire of the horse claimed was of the value of $15 per month, that Phillips was indebted to the plaintiff in that sum since the date of the conversion of said horse, [568]*568and that the other articles named in the declaration were of the monthly value of $5 for hire. This amendment does not appear to have been served on the defendant, but no exception was taken to this amendment. On the same day the jury rendered the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff the sum of $126, to be discharged on the delivery of the propei’ty in suit within ten days from date, and $246 for rent of same and costs of suit.”' Upon the said verdict judgment was entered against the defendant and his securities for the amounts found in the verdict. During the same term of said court, the defexxdant and his two securities moved to set aside said judgment on the vaxfious grounds set out in said motion. The court refused the motion upon condition that the plaintiff would write off from said judgment as against the securities all of said judgment over and above $182, the amount stipulated in the bond which they signed as securities for Phillips in the bail proceeding. The plaintiff wrote off this amount, and the judgment now stands for $182 against the secuxúties, and the whole amount found against Phillips, the principal in the bond. Phillips and his securities both excepted to this judgment of the court below, and bring the case here for review.

1. The first ground taken by the defendant in his motion was, in substance, that the judgment was illegal, because it was for $246, the hire or rent of said property, when the bail affidavit did not set forth any claim for said rexxt or hix’e. While the code, §3418, inquires a party suing out a bail process to state in his affidavit the value of the property sued for, and the amount of hire claimed, if any, we do not think if he fails to claim hire in the affidavit, that his failure would prevent him from recovering hire from the time of the commencement of the suit to the rendition of the ver[569]*569diet. It requires the value of the property and the amount of hire to be stated in the affidavit, in order to inform the sheriff of the amount at which to fix the replevy bond. If the affidavit only states the value of the property, as it did in this ease, the sheriff can only require the bond to be double that amount. If it states the value of the property and the amount of hire claimed, then the sheriff fixes the bond at double the value of the property and the hire claimed; and the plaintiff would be entitled in a proper case to recover not only the value of the property, but the hire from the time of the conversion. Where the amount of hire is omitted in the affidavit, he cannot recover the hire from the time of the conversion, but only from the time of filing his affidavit and declaration. It appears that in this case the recovery for hire was restricted to the time of the filing of the declaration, and was not extended to the time of the conversion of the property. So we see no error in the judgment of the trial judge in overruling the motion upon this ground.

2. The second ground was, in substance, that the judgment was for a sum greater than the penal sum of the bond, the sum mentioned in the bond being $182 and the judgment being for $372. We do not think the plaintiff is restricted in his recovery to the amount mentioned in the bond, so. far as the defendant, the principal in the bond, is concerned. It would be a great injustice to plaintiffs in trover cases to restrict them in their recovery for the rent or hire of property sued for, to the amount claimed in the bail affidavit, or to the penal sum of the bond given to replevy the property. The case might be pending for years, the defendant receiving the benefit of the hire of the property during that time, which might amount to much more than the penal sum mentioned in the bond, and yet, under the construction contended for by the plain[570]*570tiff in error, the plaintiff in the court below would only be entitled to double the amount of the sum claimed in the bail affidavit. The defendant in a trover case is not liable by reason of having given a bond for the eventual condemnation money, but for damages in consequence of having converted the plaintiff' ’s property, and he is liable for whatever that property is proved to be woi’th and its hire.

8. The third ground alleges, in substance, that the judgment included the amount of $41, for a wagon, harness and shawl, although it was shown upon the trial that said articles had been sold by the sheriff as perishable property, under the order of the court before said verdict and judgment were rendered, and the proceeds of said sale applied in payment of the costs and expenses. The trial judge did not err in overruling this ground of the motion for a new trial. "While it is true that the articles were sold by the sheriff' and the. proceeds applied as alleged in the motion, the record shows that .the bond given by the plaintiff in error expressly mentions these articles, and he agreed in said bond to produce them and have them forthcoming to answer the judgment of the court, and to pay whatever sum the jury might find their value to be. If he did not claim said articles, but surrendered them to the sheriff, as he alleges, he should not have mentioned them in his bond to produce them. After giving his bond for their forthcoming, he had no right to surrender them to the sheriff, and if he did so, it was a new conversion of said property, and he was liable for the value thereof. For this reason the act approved October 8th, 1887 (Acts 1887, p. 59), would not apply, even though his bond had been given after the passage of that act. That act only applies in cases where neither the plaintiff nor the defendant shall replevy the property, and provides that when it is sold by the sheriff', only the amount of the pro[571]

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.E. 270, 83 Ga. 565, 1889 Ga. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-taber-ga-1889.