Barksdale v. Brown

16 Ga. 95
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1854
DocketNo. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 Ga. 95 (Barksdale v. Brown) 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.

Bluebook
Barksdale v. Brown, 16 Ga. 95 (Ga. 1854).

Opinion

By the Court.

Benning, J.

delivering the opinion.

In this case, the defendant in error joined issue, with a protest, that neither the bill of exceptions nor the assignment of [97]*97errors, specified the error or errors complained of in the decision of the Court below. What was meant by this protest, is explained by the position taken in its support, by Mr. Gibson, one of the Counsel for the defendant in error. That position was this : “A bill of exceptions is the statement, in writing, of the objection made by a party in a cause, to the decision of the Court, on a point of law which is clearly stated therein”. The statement of the objection”.

Of error or of objection, the only specification contained in the bill of. exceptions is, that the Court over-ruled the demurrer, and that the plaintiff in error excepted to that decision. Of the objections or grounds of objection to the decision, the bill of exceptions says nothing. It is, therefore, against this omission that the protest is aimed.

Was it necessary that the objections to the decision, should have been stated in the bill of exceptions ?

The fourth section of the Statute to organize this Court, contains this passage : “all causes of a criminal or civil nature, may, for alleged error, in any decision, sentence, judgment or decree of any such Superior Court, be carried up”, &c. For alleged error in any decision — that is to say, for alleged error, consisting in any decision, or alleged error in the malting of any decision. The sense would be the same, had the words been, that all causes may be carried up, on an allegation that the Court erred, in such or such a decision, or on an allegation that such or such a decision was erroneous. It is familiar language in the mouth of lawyers and non-lawyers, that “ a Court erred in such a decision”, or “ in deciding so and so”, when they mean to say a particular judgment was erroneous. There is nothing, in this passage, which says, impliedly or expressly, that to carry causes up, it is necessary to do something more than allege a judgment to have been erroneous — that in addition to that, it is also necessary to state the objections, or grounds of objection, to the judgment; in short, to state, in brief or at length, the argument used before the Court, in resistance to the making of the judgment. Had [98]*98the passage said this, it would have said what would be equivalent to saying, that no cause should be carried up on a mere exception to a judgment — an exception for which no reasons, were given — in favor of which no argument was made. And if no cause could be carried up on any thing except arguments — except “objections” stated to decisions, when would the lawyers, conducting cases in the Courts below, consider themselves at liberty to stop arguing ? What decisions would they consider themselves at liberty to let pass, without argument ?. What remoteness of arguments would they consider remote-enough to justify them in not using the arguments ? What-number of repetitions, of the same thing, would they consider numerous enough to warrant them in relying upon the memory of the Court to give them the benefit of the thing, if they should happen, afterwards, to want it for use in a bill' of exceptions ? What stock of attention, on the part of Court and Jury, would not be worn out before the end of trials, conducted on this plan ? And this would be but a beginning. The losing lawyer would have to have his bill of exceptions, and that would contain all the objections urged to the decisions of the Court complained of — all those objections, whether good or bad — relevant or irrelevant — for knowing that he could urge, in the Court above, no objections but those urged in the Court below, and feeling it only the part of prudence to take all the chances, he would not leave a single one of those objections out of his bill of exceptions. And then, how enormously would be swelled the expenses of litigation.

And after all, what would be the gain ? What, in either Court ? . Would not the gain be a loss? Would not the effect of bringing into a case so much ’of the immaterial, be to hide the material — so much of the weak, be to dilute the strong — ■ to make the salt become invisible in the water ?

If, then, it were a doubtful question, whether this passage in the fourth section of the Statute to organize this Court, is not susceptible of a construction which would support the position of the defendant in error, the argument, from effects and consequences, requires us to say that that construction is one-[99]*99which the passage ought not to have. But, indeed, it is not ■ susceptible of that construction. And it has not, at least as a general thing, been practised upon as susceptible of that construction. The bills of exception which have been actually-used, have, for the most part, contained no more than a statement of the particular judgment excepted to, together with the facts of the case. And the propriety of such bills is sanctioned by the form of a bill of exceptions, published by the Reporter of this Court, in connection with the rules of Court — a form which, before it was published, received, it is understood, the approval of each of the persons who then constituted this Court.

This passage, then, in the Statute, does not support the position of the defendant in error. There is another passage which, it may be thought, does that. It is this, in the same fourth section: “ any cause of a civil nature, either on the Law or Equity side of the Superior Court may, in like manner, be carried to the Supreme Court, on a bill of exceptions, specifying the error, or errors, complained of in any decision or judgment”, &e. Specifying the error, or errors, are the words, not specifying the objection or objections to the judgment complained of. The specification is to be of errors committed by the Court; that is, of wrong judgments rendered by the Court — not of objections to judgments urged by a party. This passage, indeed, is but in harmony with the previous one, which has just been considered.

So much for the Statute. I may remark, that giving the Statute this construction, is but making it correspond with the ■old law — the English law, regulating bills of exception. The Statute of 13 Ed. I. c. 31, authorized “ exceptions” to decisions to be taken. It did not require the grounds of the exceptions to be stated. In practice, under the Statute, that is mot done. (2 Tidd. 862. Tidd’s Appendix, ch. 37, §46.

The protest, then, ought to be over-ruled.

Is there any equity in the bill, in this case ? The Court below held that there was.

The prayer of the bill is, that the “ verdict and judgment ¡rendered in the matter of probate and caveat of the” “will of [100]*100Macharine Bunkley,” may be annulled, “for fraud and newly discovered evidence”; that Tyrrell Barksdale and Stephen Harvey, and “ all the rest of the heirs at law, of Macharine Bunkley, may be perpetually enjoined from further using said verdict and judgment, in behalf of said plea, in bar, filed by .said defendant, in the matter of her (tho complainant’s) application for probate of said will”; that said Barksdale and Harvey Eusebius II.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ga. 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barksdale-v-brown-ga-1854.