Peterman v. Dunaway
Peterman v. Dunaway
Opinion of the Court
Where a tenant, without his landlord’s consent, seeks to remove from the premises any portion of the commercial crops before the rent is due, he is subject to distraint immediately, no matter what may be the purpose or intent of such removal. Daniel v. Harris, 84 Ga. 479 (10 S. E. 1013); International Agricultural Corp. v. Powell, 31 Ga. App. 348 (1) (120 S. E. 668); Little v. Lary, 12 Ga. App. 754 (3) (78 S. E. 470). In this case the evidence established, without dispute, that the tenant, without his landlord’s consent, had carried away from the rented premises two bales of cotton grown thereon, and had stored them in a warehouse in another county. Under the principle stated, this evidence was sufficient to support a distress warrant issuing before the rent was due, on the ground that the tenant was “seeking to remove his goods and crops from the premises.”
This being a distress proceeding converted into mesne process by counter-affidavit and bond, the plaintiff sought to recover a balance from the defendant as rent for farm lands, claiming that they were rented for the year at 6,000 pounds of lint cotton. The evidence for the tenant would have authorized a finding that notwithstanding such original terms of the rent contract, the parties thereto subsequently entered into a novation thereof by agreeing that the tenant could pay as rent one fourth of the crops produced. The landlord, however, denied such modification of the contract, testifying as follows: “Mr. Peterman came to me and spoke to me about wanting to change the contract to the fourth, and I told Peterman if he would cultivate the place properly I would consider it. No, I did not agree to rent the place to him for the fourth, I told him I would consider it.” But even assuming that this testimony of the landlord conclusively established as against him a valid agreement to alter the terms of payment, conditioned upon the proper cultivation of the crops, there was evidence, submitted directly upon the point, sufficient to authorize the inference that the tenant did not comply with such essential condition, and therefore that the novation was never effectuated.
The evidence disclosed that during the term the tenant de
There was some evidence to support the verdict, and the motion for a new trial, containing only the general grounds, having been overruled by the trial judge, this court is without power to interfere.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.