Howell v. Field
This text of 70 Ga. 592 (Howell v. Field) 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
The plaintiff in this case sued the defendant in a justice’s court, on a debt which, in the original summons, was stated thus :
“1880. E. S. Howell to S. E. Field, Dr. $16.60. On promise to pay the debt of G. O. and L. 0. Terry.”
There have been three jury trials in the justice’s court of this case, and three times has it been carried by certiorari to the superior court. The verdict was in favor of the plaintiff on each trial. They were set aside twice, upon the ground that the promise, if made, was void, under the statute of frauds. Upon the last trial, the testimony, in the opinion of the court, made a different case, and the certiorari was not sustained. The defendant, therefore, assigns error on that ruling, and brings the same to this court.
It was contended, on the argument, that there were other facts in proof which destroyed the force and effect of the above testimony. Doubtless, without explanation, this might have been so; but it all was before the jury, considered and weighed by them; and the facts must stand as they were found to exist; the duty of the court was to apply the law to them as found, and render judgment accordingly. This was done.
Upon this point, it is sufficient to say that the suit was for a debt claimed by the plaintiff to be due him from the defendant, and in undertaking to state how it originated, he failed to make out such a statement of the defendant’s [595]*595liability as tbe facts warranted. These suits in justices’ courts are not to be held to such technical rules as prevail in courts of record. Indeed, the law requires no pleadings in writing to try a case in these courts, and in fact should not. No original pleadings were necessary, and no subsequent amendments could, therefore, become indispensable. See Benson & Coleman vs. Dyer, 69 Ga., 190; Code, §457; 61 Ga., 134, 388; 62 Ib., 683.
Judgment affirmed.
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