Price v. Thompson
This text of 60 S.E. 800 (Price v. Thompson) 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.
Opinion
Price brought a petition for certiorari, to set aside 'the foreclosure of a distress warrant; and he excepts to the judgment overruling his petition. It appears that a distress warrant was sworn out in a justice’s court; to which the defendant, Price, filed a counter-affidavit. 'Upon the trial of the issue in the justice’s court, it was uncontradicted, in the evidence, that Price [47]*47rented a plantation in 1901 from' W. A. Sinquefield as agent for Sirs. H. G-. Sinquefield and Dollie Thompson and as guardian for Lofton Thompson. The rent contract was verbal, but Price went into possession and remained in possession the whole six years. Price agreed to pay 8,000 pounds of cotton per year for the rent of a four-horse farm, and in addition, as part of the rent, he was to split and put up 2,000 rails each year. The distress warrant was sworn out on January 14, 1907, and the lease expired January 1, 1907. Price paid the 8,000 pounds- of cotton on the rent for 1900, some time in November of that year, but, upon the expiration of his lease, moved away without having repaired the fences by splitting and putting up the 2,000 rails for 1906, as he had contracted to do; and the distress warrant issued for $30, claimed as rent, which was supposed to be the worth of the splitting and hauling of the rails. There was no evidence that the property levied upon by the distress warrant was made upon the rented, premises, or was there at the time of the levy, and no evidence that it was the property of the defendant-Price. The plaintiff’s testimony was to the effect, however, that the splitting and putting up of the 2,000 rails was a part of the rent contract. Price, in his petition for certiorari, excepted to the judgment against him for $20, for rent, because the verdict was contrary to evidence and without evidence to support it; also because the judgment was contrary to law, because the evidence failed to show* that the property levied upon was raised on the premises rented by plaintiff to defendant, and showed that defendant had paid the 8,000 pounds of cotton before the distress warrant was sued out; also because it was not shown that the property was the property of the defendant when levied upon; and further because the indebtedness, if any, was not for rent; and even if it had been made for rent, the contract having been made in 1901 and being verbal, and the rent claimed being for 1906, the contract was void under the statute of frauds. The question really raised by the various exceptions (all of which we do not mention) is, whether, as a matter of law, under the undisputed testimony, the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment upon the distress warrant.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
60 S.E. 800, 4 Ga. App. 46, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-thompson-gactapp-1908.