King v. King

37 Ga. 205
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 37 Ga. 205 (King v. King) 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
King v. King, 37 Ga. 205 (Ga. 1867).

Opinion

Warner, C. J.

The record in this case discloses the fact that Mrs. Mary Jane King for herself and in behalf of her two minor children Beatrice and Ada, filed her. bill in Floyd Superior Court in June 1866, against Joshua King, Daniel R. Mitchell, Wm. Franklin and Henry A, Gartrell, praying for a discovery and account, in relation to a certain promissory note executed by King for the sum of $4,300.00, which note, it is alleged, was trust property, executed for the benefit of Mrs. King and her two minor children, at or about the time of her separation from her husband; that the consideration of said note was the amount of property she was entitled to receive out of her husband’s estate, as agreed on by the parties at the time of their separation. It also appears that Franklin was appointed trustee for Mi’s. King, and, as such trustee, placed the note for $4,300.00 in the hands of Daniel R. Mitchell, an attorney at law, for collection; that suit was ixistituted thereon in the name of Franklin, the trustee, and judgment obtained against [215]*215King, the maker, for principal and interest due up to the time the judgment was rendered. On the 10th day of July, 1863, Mitchell, as the attorney of Eranldin, the trustee, received from King, the defendant, the amount of principal and interest due on said judgment in Confederate Treasury notes, in full payment and satisfaction thereof. On the 4th day of October, 1863, Mitchell, the attorney, paid over the Confederate money to his client, Franklin, and took his receipt therefor, without objection on the part of Franklin, so far as the record shows. . Afterwards, on the 5th March, 1864, Franklin was removed as trustee, and Henry A. Gartrell was appointed trustee for Mrs. King, and the trust property aforesaid was turned over to him. The bill alleges a fraudulent combination between the parties, especially between Mitchell and King, to pay off this trust debt in Confederate money, and the main object of the bill is, to set aside the payments so made by King -to Mitchell, the attorney, as well as the payment made by Mitchell, the attorney, to his client, Franklin, the trustee, and to have the amount of this trust debt paid in good money.

As we feel constrained to order a new trial in this case for errors which we find in the record, committed on the former, trial, we shall express no opinion upon the facts involved in it, but simply state the general rules of the law which are applicable to this particular class of cases.

The first ground of error assigned to the judgment of the Court below, which we will now consider, is that which relates to the order of the argument of counsel before the jury. The Court below, ruled that, as Mitchell; one of the defendants, had not introduced any evidence upon the trial of the cause, his counsel should be entitled to conclude the argument before the jury, although some of the other defendants had introduced evidence upon the trial. It is a well settled rule of practice in our courts of law upon the trial of cases before the ' jury, that, if any of the defendants introduce evidence upon the trial, the plaintiff is entitled to open and conclude the argument. By the 4144 section of the Eevised Code, the same rule of practice is to be observed in the trial of [216]*216equity causes, as in trials at law, in the conduct of the cause before the jury, except that, when .a complainant relies solely on the defendant’s answer, he shall be entitled to open and conclude the cause. In this cause there were four defendants sued together jointly — there was no demurrer for misjoinder of parties at the proper time, — they elected to go to trial as joint defendants, and jointly resist the complainant’s recovery. The case stood before the Court just like any other case, with the complainant on one hand and the defendants on the other. Some of the defendants introduced evidence to resist the complainant’s right to recover a verdict. The legal presumption is that, being jointly sued, and jointly defending, they had a common interest in the result of the verdict, and those who introduced no evidence, were as much bound by the rule of the Court, as those who did. The question for the Court in all such cases, is, was there any evidence introduced for the defence, against the complainant’s demand? If there was, then the complainant’s solicitor is entitled to open and conclude the argument before the jury.

The next ground of error assigned in the record which we will now consider, is that relating to the charge of the Court to the jury, ás to the right of the complainant to recover against the defendants in this cause, in the name of the complainant, who sues for herself and her two minor children. The Court below charged the jury, that “complainants ought not to recover', because such recovery would be no protection to any of the defendants, and that they would be liable to be again harassed with suits by other next friends, by the lawful trustee, or by the minors after Mrs. King’s death.” If the proposition asserted by the Court, in its charge to the jury upon this branch of the case, be a sound legal proposition applicable to the state of facts then before it, the verdict ought to have been for the defendants, irrespective of the merits'of the cause established by the evidence upon the trial. No matter what may have been the merits of the complainant’s cause under the evidence, still, under the charge of the Court she would not be entitled to recover a verdict against the defendants, if that verdict, or decree rendered [217]*217upon it, would be no protection to them from subsequent suits for the same cause of action. But we do not think that the proposition asserted by the Court in its charge, as applicable to the facts contained in this record, was a soumd legal proposition. This bill was filed by the complainant, in behalf of herself and her two minor children. It is true she does not sue as their guardian, nor does she style herself their “ next friend” in so many words — but that is the legal effect of the suit — she sues in behalf of herself and two minor children, and if she had formally stated she was their “ next friend ” it would not, in the view which a Court of Equity takes of such matters, have enlarged, or restricted her status before the Court. The interest of herself, and the interest of her two minor children, in the subject matter of the suit, is dis-tinctly stated in the bill, which was before the Court. To the extent of her own individual interest, she was sui juris at least. But under the provisions of our Code, if this suit had been instituted in behalf of the infants alone, and a verdict had in their favor against the defendants, it would not have been void, but the defect of not sueing by their guar-, dian, or next friend, would have been cured by the verdict. The 3194 section of the Revised Code declares that, “ A suit commenced and prosecuted by an infant alone is not void, and although the suit is defective in wanting a guardian or next friend, the defect is amendable before verdict, and cwred by verdict.” By the 4114, 4119 and 4120 sections of the Revised Code, it is further declared that, “No mere formality, or omission of a formality, shall vitiate, or delay a proceeding in equity, but the same liberality as to amendment,-shall be allowed therein, as in a proceeding at law.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ga. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-king-ga-1867.