Fischesser v. Thompson

45 Ga. 459
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 Ga. 459 (Fischesser v. Thompson) 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
Fischesser v. Thompson, 45 Ga. 459 (Ga. 1872).

Opinions

Warner, Chief Justice.

This case came before the Court below on a motion to distribute money raised under a judgment against a garnishee who was indebted to J. B. Fisehesser, deceased. The judgment against the garnishee for $1,000, was rendered at the September Term of Elbert Superior Court, 1870. The contest was between the judgment creditor of Fisehesser and his widow, who claimed the money in Court under the judgment of the Ordinary of Oglethorpe county, allowing her $1,200 for her year’s support out of the estate of her deceased husband, as a debt of the highest dignity. On the hearing of the case, the Court below decided that the judgment of the Ordinary, allowing the twelve months’ support to the widow was null and void, and refused the motion to pay the money over to her, whereupon the counsel for the widow excepted. The record of the proceedings and judgment of the Ordinary of Oglethorpe county was offered by the widow and read in evidence to the Court, by which it appears that on [461]*461the 4th day of June, 1869, the Ordinary appointed five commissioners to set apart twelve months’ support for the widow out of the estate of her deceased husband; that on the 28th of July, 1869, the commissioners made their return, stating that they had allowed the widow for her year’s support the sum of $1,200, which was filed in the Ordinary’s office 21st August, 1869, and recorded 24th February, 1870. It does not appear on the face of the proceedings had before the Ordinary, that the application of the widow for her twelve months’ support was made by a petition, in writing, or that any notice of such application was ever given to the executors of Fischesser.

On the 31st May, 1871, the Ordinary, at Chambers, ordered an amendment to be made to his former order, nunc pro tunc, so that it should recite that due and legal notice of the application for the twelve months’ support had been given to one of the co-executors of Fischesser, inasmuch as it was omitted to have been recited in the first order by inadvertance. The facts, as disclosed by the record, present two questions for our consideration and judgment. First, whether the judgment of the Ordinary, setting apart the twelve months’ support to the widow, as it was first made, was a valid judgment, under the laws of this State; and, second, if it was not, whether the nunc pro tunc order of the Ordinary cured it, and made the original judgment valid, as against the rights of the judgment creditor, claiming the money under his judgment. By the 2530th section of the Code, it is made the duty of the Ordinary, on the application of the widow, on notice to the representative of the estate, to proceed to appoint appraisers to ascertain and set apart a twelve months’ support for the widow and children of deceased testators or intestates. The appraisers must make their return within three months from the date of their action, to which return objections may be filed, by any person interested, within six months after filing the same in office, and if no objections are made, or if made are disallowed, the Ordinary shall record [462]*462the return so made in a book to be kept for this purpose: Code, 2532. When all has been done which the law requires to be done, then the Ordinary may issue a writ of fieri facias against the representative of the estate for the amount awarded to the widow: Code, 2536; and has also power to enforce obedience to all lawful orders by attachment for contempt : Code, 4050.

We have seen that, by the 2530th section, the widow may make her application to the Ordinary for her year’s support, on giving nolice to the representative of the estate, if there be one. Rut in what manner is that application to be made ? The 4043d section of the Code answers that question when it declares that, “ Every application made to the Ordinary for the granting of any order, shall be by petition, in writing, stating the grounds of such application, and the order sought.” This same section also declares that, if notice of such application is necessary, under the law, the Ordinary shall cause a copy of such application, together with a notice of the time of hearing, to be served by the sheriff, or some lawful officer, upon the party or parties to be notified, at least ten days before the hearing, and an entry of such service made on the original. The 4044th section declares that, the order of the Ordinary shall always recite the names of the persons so notified, and the compliance with the provisions required. There can be no dispute that, under the laws of the State, as the same are plainly written, that the widow, when she made application to the Ordinary for her twelve months’ support out of the estate of her deceased husband, should have made that application by petition, in writing, and have notified the representative of the estate of such application. The executors of this estate were the representatives of the creditors thereof, and notice to them would have been notice to the creditors, but if no notice has been given to the executors, then the creditors have had no notice, and no opportunity allowed them to contest the widow’s application for her twelve months’ support; they have never had their day in Court as to that [463]*463matter, and it is now sought to bind them by a judgment, to which they were not parties or privies, and have had no opportunity to contest it before the Ordinary. The law is right as it stands, and was intended to provide against the extravagant allowance for a year’s support to the widow, to the exclusion of the rights of creditors, and ought to be enforced, so as to prevent the absorbing of dead men’s estates, in granting unreasonable amounts for the year’s support of their widows and children.

In the year 1856, the General Assembly passed an Act making the Courts of Ordinary in this State, Courts of general jurisdiction, and it then became necessary to provide that all applications for the granting of any order should be by petition, in writing, and notice given in all cases where the law required notice, which is now required by the Code to be done. Although the Courts of Ordinary are declared to be Courts of general jurisdiction, still, the law requires that certain material facts shall always be recited in the orders and judgments of that Court. When it appears on the face of the record of a judgment of a Court of general jurisdiction that the Court had jurisdiction of the person and the subject matter, in the manner prescribed by law, then, the legal presumption is that everything was proved that was necessary to authorize the rendition of the judgment. The judgment of a Court having no jurisdiction of the person and subject matter, or void for any other cause, is a mere nullity, and may be so held in any Court where it becomes material to the interest of the parties to consider it : Code, 3536. The legal presumption is always in favor of the judgment of a Court of general jurisdiction, but if the record of a judgment of the Superior Court should be presented, and it appeared on an inspection of that record that there was no petition and process, requiring the defendant to appear in Court, and no service on the defendant, or waiver of service, and no notice given to him of the pendency of the suit, will it be pretended that such a judgment would be binding upon the [464]

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ga. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischesser-v-thompson-ga-1872.