Calhoun v. Cawley

30 S.E. 773, 104 Ga. 335, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 26, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 773 (Calhoun v. Cawley) 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
Calhoun v. Cawley, 30 S.E. 773, 104 Ga. 335, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 329 (Ga. 1898).

Opinion

Lumpkin, P. J.

1. A proper determination of the controlling question presented by the case now before us involves a consideration of the right of a private citizen to avail himself of the writ of scire facias in order that a grant from the State to a third person may be revoked and set aside. It becomes necessary, in view of the uncertainty which apparently envelops our law upon this subject, to notice briefly the nature and purpose of this writ under the English practice, from which we have borrowed this form of procedure. “In England, a scire facias is an original action when it is issued to repeal letters patent.” 2 Rap. & Law. L. Die. 1153. It is the proper remedy to be pursued in the event a grant has been improvidently made to one not entitled thereto, and lies “at the suit of the Queen, or the first patentee, where a patent for the same thing [has] been granted to two persons.” 21 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 879. “Where the crown hath unadvisedly granted anything by letters patent, which ought not to be granted, or [337]*337where the patentee hath done an act which amounts to a forfeiture of the grant, the remedy to repeal the patent is by writ of scire facias in chancery. This may be brought either on the part of the King, in order to resume the thing granted; or, if the grant be injurious to a subject, the King is bound of right to permit him (upon his petition) to use his royal name for repealing the patent in a scire facias.” 3 Bl. Com. 260-261. To the same effect, see 2 Bouv. Law Die. 614. “This privilege of suing in the name of the crown for the repeal of the patent is granted to prevent multiplicity of suits.” Ibid. 615, citing 2 ¥ms. Saund. 72, notes. It is to be observed that, though the writ might issue upon the petition of a subject, the suit was invariably brought in the right and in the name of the sovereign.

The procedure which obtained in this class of cases was thus explained by Judge Lumpkin in Walker v. Wells, 17 Ga. 550-551: “In England, grants are issued by the Lord Chancellor, after affixing the great seal of the United Kingdom to them; and a record is made of them in the Court of Chancery. Consequently, when it is proposed, there, to vacate a grant, the writ of scire facias issues from the Common Law side of the Court of Chancery, where the grant is enrolled, and is there adjudicated unless the pleadings terminate in an issue or issues of fact. If they do, the pleadings are made up in the Rolls office, and the record sent into the King’s Bench, to be tried by a jury, where, on a verdict had, the judgment is rendered.” It is obvious that this mode of procedure is out of the question in this State. In the first place, we have no Lord Chancellor, nor any officer exercising the peculiar functions which in England devolved upon that high official, and we have long since departed from the practice of instituting actions in the manner which formerly prevailed in that country. Besides, as is pointed out by Judge Lumpkin, “in Georgia, grants are enrolled in the office of the secretary of the State, which is an establishment not only distinct from any of the courts of this State, but belonging to another and independent branch of the government; and as “a scire facias is always founded upon a record, and issues from and is made returnable to the court where the record is kept,” it is not to be wondered at that he [338]*338put the question: “Without legislation, then, how can the courts acquire jurisdiction by process of scire facias over disputed questions relative to grants? ” The particular difficulty thus suggested was met by the adoption of the Code of 1863, § 2332, which provided that: “ Grants issued by the State may be set aside by the superior court of the county where the land lies, upon a writ of scire facias, on the ground that the same were obtained by fraud or willful misrepresentations by the grantee, or -those in privity with him, to the officers of the State; or on the ground of collusion between the grantee and the said officers; or of fraud, accident, or mistake by the officers, known to the grantee.” Civil Code, § 3219. This section seems to have been framed in conformity to the decision rendered by this court in Hilliard v. Connelly, 7 Ga. 172. There the act of 1837, which was an attempt to clothe the Governor “with the power to revoke the State’s grant after it has issued, and to determine the rights of parties litigating under it, and to issue a new grant in conformity with any alterations he may make,” was attacked as unconstitutional. In dealing with the question thus presented, Nisbet, J., said : “When the State issues her grant, under her great seal, she can not recall it. It is the irrevocable testimony that she has divested herself of the thing granted. Grants do not exist as title against the State during her pleasure. If the Government can recall its grant for one cause, why not for all causes? If it can at all, it is a pure despotism. The grant, when it has issued, is a contract. One part}*- to a contract can not set it -aside, although that party be a sovereign •State. If conflicting claims or rights or interests spring up under that contract, by reason of mistake, error, fraud, or any other cause, the courts of justice are open for their adjustment.” Accordingly, it was, in the case just cited, held that the recourse of the State, in the event a grant had been by its officials improvidently issued, was to institute a legal proceeding looking to the repeal of its grant, the executive department of the State having no power to arbitrarily recall a grant once formally made to a subject.

It may, therefore, be safely asserted that there can no longer be any room for doubt that the State can, in its own name and [339]*339in itS'Own right, resort to the writ of scire facias in order to effect a repeal of a grant improvidently issued. It is equally true, however, that there is an entire absence of legislation conferring upon a private citizen the right to institute such a proceeding in his own name under any circumstances; and, without legislation upon the subject, the inevitable conclusion must be that this remedy lies only at the instance, and in the name, of the sovereign, and can not be taken advantage of by a subject in an independent action seeking relief against an injury he has incidentally suffered by reason of the issuance of a grant wrongfully secured by a third person. As lias been seen, under the English practice no such right existed, the action being invariably instituted in the name and in the right of the crown. As explained by Blackstone, if the King by his grant unadvisedly prejudiced the rights of a subject, common justice demanded that the latter should, upon his petition, be permitted to use the former's “ royal name for repealing the patent in a scire facias.” Such petition was addressed to the Chancellor, who, as the keeper of the King’s conscience, passed upon the subject’s complaint of the sovereign’s act by which he was injured, and, in a proper case, issued in the name of the King the writ necessary to a prosecution of the suit. In other words, the consent of the crown to the use of its name had first to be ■obtained before any action could be instituted; and, as a matter of course, the subject himself having no cause of action against the grantee, the suit thenceforth proceeded in the right of the crown, it being the sole party at liberty to complain of the fraud or deception practiced upon it by the grantee in wrongfully inducing the grant to be made.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 773, 104 Ga. 335, 1898 Ga. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-cawley-ga-1898.