Craig v. Webb
This text of 70 Ga. 188 (Craig v. Webb) 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.
Opinion
This is a bill of exceptions brought by G. W. F. Craig,, Anderson S. Bell and John Silvey, who assign error to a judgment of the superior court of the county of Milton on a money rule against the sheriff, to which themselves, and Louisa J. Rogers, B. J. Brown, Robert Medlock,, Mathew Sloan, James M. Taylor, L. J. Rogers, Hardy and Eliza Strickland, and R. P. Baugh were parties in the court below. No party is made defendant to this bill of exceptions but Hardy and Eliza Strickland, who alone are served with it by acknowledgment of service by their counsel. A motion was made by counsel for G. W. F. Craig, one of the plaintiffs in error, to amend the bill of exceptions by adding thereto the names of Robert Med-lock, John Palmour, Louisa J. Rogers, Robert P. Baugh James M. Taylor and Wm. E. Simmons as plaintiffs in error.
The case in the 62 Ga., 138, was brought by the administrator against the contestants for the fund; this is a rule by one of the contestants against the sheriff, and to which the other contestants were made parties, and were p>arties against the plaintiff in the rule. The motion to make Medlock a party plaintiff in error, when he does not have any error to complain of, but must want the judgment which gave him the money below affirmed, must therefore be denied. The motion to amend does not include Sloan. If it did, it would be ruled in the same way. And the same applies to Wm. E. Simmons and Louisa J. Rogers, who are interested in the affirmance of the judgment.
So far as Wm. E. Simmons is affected, he could acknowledge service, and he might also for Medlock, as attorney for lmn, if the fact appeared of record or was undisputed, under Code, section 4259 ; but the trouble would still exist as to Sloan and Louisa J. Rogers. We can, therefore, ¡see no way out of the trouble in which the cause is involved than to dismiss it. It is true, that the counsel for the Stricklands do also assign error as to others in the bill of exceptions, but that is a mere permissive right. % Their [191]*191acknowledgment of service was procured to make them defendants in error; and if they are not, no substantial party is,'and the- case would go out, because there wopld be no defendant at all.
Dismissed for want of service.
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