Echols v. Barrett

6 Ga. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1849
DocketNo. 59
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 Ga. 443 (Echols v. Barrett) 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
Echols v. Barrett, 6 Ga. 443 (Ga. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court.

Warner, J.

delivering the opinion.

The first ground of error assigned to the decision of the Court below is, the admission of the certificate of the Clerk of the Court of Ordinary, as apart of the plaintiff’s title to the negro sued for.

[1.] The plaintiff below sued, as the administrator, with the will annexed, of Henry Huff, deceased, and to make out his title to recover, he offered in evidence the certificate mentioned in the record, to establish his appointment as such administrator. Two objections were made to its admissibility. First, because it appeared, on the face of the certificate, that the administrator was not qualified before the Court of Ordinary. Second, because it appeared on the face of the certificate of the Clerk of the Court of Ordinary, that the administrator was one of the Justices of the Court, presiding at the time the judgment of the Court was rendered, appointing himself such administrator.

Both objections, in our judgment, were well taken, and should have been sustained by the Court below. By the fifth section of the Act of 1792, every executor, or administrator with the will annexed, is required to take the oath prescribed by that Act, well and truly to execute the same, at the time of proving the will, or on granting administration. By the seventh section of the same Act, every administrator is required, when letters are granted to him, to take the oath prescribed, before the Register of Probates. Prince, 227. The Court of Ordinary has been substituted in the place of the Register of Probates. By the first section of the [447]*447Act of 1810, it is declared, the Inferior Court, when sitting for Ordinary purposes, shall have the original jurisdiction of all testate and intestate estates, appointing administrators and guardians, to qualify executors, administrators and guardians, &c. Prince, 239. The Act of 1820, requires that the oath of a guardian, appointed by the Court of Ordinary, shall be taken before the Court. Prince, 244. The oath of an executor, administrator or guardian, should, in our judgment, according to a fair construction of the Statutes, be taken before the Court of Ordinary ; and as a matter of practice, we think it would be more regular, to have the oath prescribed by the Statutes, entered on the minutes of the Court of Ordinary, and sworn to and subscribed by the exe'eutor, administrator or guardian. Then the oath would constitute a part of the record.

The argument for the defendant in error is, that the Court is bound to presume the administrator was duly qualified, when letters of administration have been granted to him by the Court of Ordinary. Such, undoubtedly, would be the legal presumption, had the plaintiff below offered in evidence his letters of administration; but he did not offer in evidence his letters of administration ; he offered in evidence a certified copy of the record from the Court of Ordinary, from which it affirmatively appears, that the administrator was not qualified before the Court, but was qualified out of term time, or, as the Clerk states, in the “recess.” The certified copy of the record offered in evidence affords no ground for presumption that the administrator was qualified before the Court during term time, but, on the contrary, expressly rebuts it. To presume he was so qualified, would be to presume against the facts apparent on the face of the-record. Presumptions cannot be received in opposition to affirmative facts. The Clerk certifies, that in the-“recess,” May 29th, 1847, James W. Barrett was qualified as the administrator of Henry Huff, deceased, pursuant to an order of the Court, passed at the last term of the Court. Whether he was qualified by the Clerk, in the “recess,” or by some judicial officer, the record does not inform us.

[2.] With regard to the objection, that the plaintiff below presided in his own cause, at the time the judgment of the Court was rendered, appointing him administrator on the estate of Henry Huff, the record shows, that he was one of the presiding Justices [448]*448of the Court at that time. "We are, however, asked to presume, that inasmuch as the record shows there were four other Justices presiding, that he retired, and did not preside at the time the order appointing him administrator was passed by the Court. As we have already said, to allow such a presumption to prevail, would be to presume against the facts apparent on the face of the record. The record does not show he retired from the judgment seat, but, on the contrary, shows that he was there as one of the presiding Justices when the order appointing him administrator was passed; and when a fact appears by the record, we do not feel ourselves at liberty to presume against the existence of such fact. That a party cannot be a judge in his own cause and give a judgment in his own favor, was not controverted on the argument.

[3.] The second ground of error assigned to the judgment of the Court below is, the admission of the will of the testator in evidence in favor of the plaintiff. The Court admitted the will as evidence of the plaintiff’s title, and for other purposes, as the record informs us. That the will of the testator is admissible in some cases in favor of the executor or administrator, with the will annexed, is readily conceded; but under the state of facts presented by this record, we are of the opinion it ought not to have been admitted to show title in the plaintiff as against the defendants. The great question in the case, as appeal's by the record, was, whether Henry Huff, the testator, had given the negro in dispute to his son, John Huff in his lifetime, or had only loaned him to his son — the defendants claiming title under John Huff. The only clause in the will which relates to the negro in dispute, reads as follows : “ For the love and affection I have for my son, John Huff, I loan to him a negro boy named Edmund, so long as he may live, and after his death, to return to the surviving children, unless he should have an heir or heirs born to him- — in that event, to go to them.” The negro had been in the possession of John Huff as one of the witnesses states, about one year before the testator’s death. The testator had parted with the possession of the property in his lifetime. The will did not take effect until after the death of the testator. The administrator, with the will annexed, claims title to the negro as the legal representative of his testator, and to entitle him to recover as against the defendants, it was incumbent on him to have shown possession, or the right of possession, in his testator in his lifetime, by competent evi[449]*449dence. The declaration of the testator, made in his will, that he had loaned the negro to his son, was not competent evidence, in our judgment, to establish that fact in favor of the administrator suing in his right. A party cannot give in evidence his own declarations in support of his own title, for the purpose of divesting the title of another, the more especially when such declarations have been made subsequent to the declarant’s having parted with the possession and title to the property. LaFarge vs. Kneeland, 7 Cowen’s Rep. 459. Phœnix vs. The Assignees of Ingraham, 5 John. Rep. 412. Sprague vs. Kneeland, 12 Wendell’s R. 164. Exrs. of McKane vs. Bonner, 1 Bailey’s Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ga. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echols-v-barrett-ga-1849.