Soluble Pacific Guano Co. v. Harris
This text of 78 Ga. 20 (Soluble Pacific Guano Co. v. Harris) 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
One Spraggins rented land from Henry R. Harris and also became indebted to him as his landlord for supplies furnished to enable him to make his crop. The rent was reserved to be paid in cotton. After the crop grown on the land rented had matured and the landlord’s special lien had attached, and before the rent or any part of the bill for the supplies furnished had been paid, the tenant carried four bales of the cotton to Senoia and sold them to the agent of the Pacific Guano Company, who had furnished him with fertilizers which were used on the rented land. The landlord alleged, and gave evidence of the fact, [22]*22that this purchase was not made in good faith, that the agent of the guano company had notice of his liens at the time he made it, and that he entered into the transaction with a view to obtain a priority over his lien contrary to the provisions of the code, §1977. A distress warrant was sued out, setting up the landlord’s special lien on the matured crop, and was levied on the cotton thus sold, to which the guano company interposed its claim. The company denied notice to its agent of plaintiff’s lien when The purchase was made; and insisted on the trial of the claim case that the cotton purchased of the defendant had been removed before the distress warrant was levied, and that which was seized under the levy was not the cotton grown on plaintiff’s premises; that after the levy had been made, the defendant in the distress warrant turned over the cotton reserved for rent to his landlord and directed its appropriation to the payment of that debt; and that, contrary to that direction, Harris, the landlord, applied a portion of it to the extinguishment of the lien he held for supplies. In these two last questions, viz. the identity of the cotton levied on with that grown on the rented premises, and the violation of the direction to appropriate the cotton turned over to the extinguishment of the rent claim, the evidence was somewhat conflicting, but its preponderance was with the finding of the jury.
Other grounds of the motion for a new trial make immaterial questions, which need not be considered.
Judgment affirmed.
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