In this case the plaintiff in execution failed to show title in the defendant in execution, or possession in him since the date of the judgment; whereupon he was non-suited and the levy was dismissed. Thereupon he moved for a new trial upon the ground of error in the non-suit, and upon the further ground of newly discovered testimony. The court below granted the new trial, and the claimant excepted, and assigns for error the judgment granting the new trial on either ground.
1. The court did not err in non-suiting the plaintiff and dismissing the levy upon the facts disclosed in the record, and therefore the new trial should not have been granted on that ground. The plaintiff, it will be observed, showed possession in defendant in fi. fa. for several years — but not enough to presume title by prescription — up to Christmas, 1869, and title out of defendant in fi.fa. and wife of homestead in the land levied on, in July, 1870. The date of the judgment was in February, 1870, therefore no possession after judgment was shown, and if possession be relied on to cast the onus on the claimant, possession in defendant after judgment is necessary. Indeed the Code declares that at the date of the levy there must be such possession to change the onus. Code, §3739. But this is codified from Cobb’s Digest, p. 533, being the act of 1821. Since that act this court, however, uniformly held that possession after the date of the judgment would cast the onus, and such is the uniform construction thereof, 6 Ga., 410; 11 Ga., 313; 13 Ga., 545, etc., etc.
2. But if defendant had title, and the plaintiff showed that, of course it would cast the onus. The plaintiff did not show title in the defendant, but out of him, in that he showed a sale to Buchanan by husband and wife of a homestead. Title out of defendant would not do, if it had been made by him alone, and so it has been held since, 14 Ga., 313.
*302But here, title to a homestead passed out of defendant in fi.fa. and wife; therefore they must have had a homestead before they could convey one, and if they had such homestead before this judgment, the land was not subject unless the debt was anterior to 1868, of which there is no positive proof in the record. It is enough, however, that land cannot be condemned as the property of defendant in fi-fa. by showing title out of him. Therefore the non-suit was right, neither possession nor title since the date of the judgment being shown in the defendant ra.fi. fa.
3. In regard to the newly discovered evidence, we think that the plaintiff in fi.fa. has not shown that diligence which the law requires. The land was levied on in 1873, the trial was had iu 1878, the plaintiff announced ready, and showed possession only to Christmas, 1869 ; that possession was in defendant, and after him in his father-in-law, up to Christmas of 1869, when he, the father-in-law, was killed. The newly discovered evidence is all from witnesses in the county, and goes to show possession in the son of defendant after his father-in-law died. One of the witnesses by whom it is to be proved, was in attendance at court, and the other two in the county and accessible. No reason at all appears in the affidavit, either of counsel or party, why they were not subpoenaed and at the court, and no explanation appears in the record of the want of diligence which the law requires in case of application for new trial on the ground of newly discovered testimony. There must be an end of litigation ; and parties must not put the county to the expense of two trials, when it is their negligence that makes the last necessary. See 41 Ga., 426; 42 Ga., 462, etc., etc.
Reluctant, therefore, as we are to interfere in the grant by the presiding judge of a new trial, yet when the questions are purely questions of law, and the judgment is wrong thereon, as we think is the case here, we feel constrained to interfere; and therefore we reverse the judgment which awarded the new trial in this case.
.Judgment reversed.