DocketNumber: 6841
Judges: Bussell
Filed Date: 6/1/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/8/2024
When this case was here before (Brown Guano Co. v. Coker, 13 Ga. App. 614), the judgment of the lower court, awarding a nonsuit, was reversed. In the trial now.under review the jury rendered a verdict against the principal in the forthcoming bond, and exceptions are taken to the refusal to grant a new trial. In addition to the general grounds of the motion for a new trial, complaint is made that the court erred in admitting the sheriff’s advertisement, but this exception, not being referred to in the argument, dies from neglect.
Complaint is made that the court charged the jury, in effect, that the title to the property involved was not in issue, and limited the defense to the single contention that the relationship of landlord and tenant existed, precluding any defense if the jury believed that the true relation between the defendant and her husband was that of landlord and superintendent. We do not think these assignments of error are supported by the record, especially when the instructions of the court are analyzed in the light of the issues.
-There was no error in the instructions of which complaint is made in the third and fourth grounds of the amendment to the motion for a new trial, when (as suggested by the marginal note of the trial judge) they are considered with what was said by the judge in immediate connection therewith. The excerpt, “in other words the court undertakes to charge you that this is the law: that it is not a question of title to the property, the plaintiff does not have to show title, nor does the defendant have the right to raise simply the question of title,” is only a part of a sentence which concludes as follows: “but the plaintiff has to show damages, and the defendant is permitted, under the law, to show that the plaintiff was not damaged, if she can, because the property was not subject to the execution.” The excerpt contained in the fourth ground was: “It is not a question of title between these parties, but the main issue is: Has the plaintiff been damaged, by the failure of the defendant to produce the property? One side contends that he has, and one that he has not.” In using the words “these parties” the court was not referring to the defendant in fi. fa. and his wife (the defendant in the suit then on trial), but was speaking of the real parties in the ease; and we held, when the case was here before, that in a suit on a forthcoming bond the title to the property levied upon is generally not involved.
There was no error in the trial which would authorize this court to control the discretion of the trial judge in overruling the motion for a new trial. Judgment, affirmed.