Kingsbery v. Ryan

17 S.E. 689, 92 Ga. 108
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 22, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 689 (Kingsbery v. Ryan) 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
Kingsbery v. Ryan, 17 S.E. 689, 92 Ga. 108 (Ga. 1893).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

In Ryan v. Kingsbery, receiver, et al., 88 Ga. 361, this [110]*110court affirmed a judgment of the superior court of Fulton county adjudicating that Ryan was in contempt of the court by disobeying its order to pay over money to the receiver. Afterwards, he filed a petition for a rehearing, and prayed that he might be allowed to show that he was not then, and had not at any time been, in contempt of the court. In Ryan v. Kingsbery, receiver, et al., 89 Ga. 228, the judgment of the.court below denying this petition was affirmed, this court holding that the question of contempt was res adjudicaba. It further held that, inasmuch as no person should be detained in prison for a failure to pay money into court or deliver the same to a receiver if there was ground for reasonable doubt of his ability to do so, the doctrine of res adjudicaba could not be invoked or used to make imprisonment perpetual; and accordingly, under the power conferred upon this court by section 4284 of the code, the following direction was given to the judge below, viz: “that if, in his discretion, he shall think the ends of justice so require, he refer it to a master or auditor to take testimony and report to him as to the amount of money or other assets in the hands or under the control of Stephen A. Ryan, and as to his ability to comply with the order of July 28th, 1891, requiring him to surrender to the receiver the sum of $120,490.79, and that upon reception of the report, the said judge do consider the same and take such action thereon with reference to the discharge or further detention of said Ryan as, in the exercise of his discretion, he may deem consistent with right and law. The inquiry embraced in this direction will be conducted independently of any previous inquiry, and will involve an account of all money and other assets in the hands or under the control of said Ryan at the time he was attached for contempt and subsequently.” Exercising his discretion and pursuing the above direction, Judge [111]*111Clarke appointed an auditor, who made a report finding that on July 28, 1891, when demand was made upon Ryan by the receiver, he (Ryan) had in his hands or under his control the sum of $73,529.82 which he was able to surrender to the receiver. Various exceptions were filed by the parties on both sides to this report, and action upon the same is still pending in the court below. On the 22d day of December, 1892, and while matters were in the condition above indicated, the legislature passed an act amending section 4711 of the code by adding thereto a proviso in the following language; “ Provided, that in no case shall any person be imprisoned for contempt for failing or refusing to pay over money under any order, judgment or decree of any court of law, or any court of this State, when he denies-that the money ordered or decreed to be paid over is in his power, custody or control, until he has had a trial by jury as hereinafter provided. The allegation of the plaintiff, receiver, referee, or any other person or persons, that the defendant has a certain sum of money within his power, custody or control, which he is withholding or refusing or fails to pay over, and the denial of the defendant that he has the power, custody or control of said money, shall form the issue to be tried by the jury, and the jury shall pass upon the facts,” etc. Acts of 1892, p. 65.

Thereupon the counsel for Ryan immediately presented to the presiding judge a petition as follows :

"Charles S. Kingsbery, v. receiveer, Stephen A. Ryan. }Proceedings for contempt. In Fulton superior court.

“Defendant in the above stated case comes and respectfully represents to the court that he is now imprisoned in the county jail of Fulton county for failing to pay over to the plaintiff, as receiver, certain money under an order of this court heretofore made in the case of L. & C. Wise and others against this defendant and [112]*112others. The plaintiff, as receiver, alleged that defendant had a certain sum of monéy within his power, custody or control, 'which he was withholding and refusing and failing to pay over, and defendant has denied that he had the power, custody or control of said money, or any part thereof, and he now here again repeats said denial. Defendant asks permission of the court to file this, his motion, that the issue formed by said allegation of the receiver and denial of defendant may be tried by a jury.”

The receiver demurred to this petition on various grounds, and moved to dismiss it. The presiding judge overruled the demurrer, refused to dismiss the petition, and passed an order granting the prayer for a trial by jury “as provided in the act approved December 22d, 1892,” and directing that Ryan be admitted to bail, “ the bond to be conditioned for his personal appearance to answer the judgment or decree of the court in the premises.” The bill of exceptions in the present case assigns as error the granting of this order.

1. A motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that “ the case ” had not been finally disposed of, and was pending in the court below. It will be observed that the petition filed by Ryan does not make the slightest reference or allusion to the auditor’s report, the exceptions thereto, or the pending proceedings thereon. It is plainly and manifestly an effort to obtain a trial of the question of contempt in the manner pointed out by the act above referred to. Its evident object and purpose was to secure a de novo investigation of that question, without any reference whatever to the fact that it had already been tried and finally adiudicated. In our opinion, this petition of itself originated an entirely new and distinct case. It cannot be regarded as a motion for a trial by jury of the issues between the parties arising upon the auditor’s report and the exceptions filed to the same. There is nothing whatever in the record to indicate that it had any such. [113]*113purpose. On the contrary, it sought a new and independent trial by jury of the issues originally made between the receiver and Ryan. The fact, therefore, that the proceedings upon the auditor’s report are still pending and undisposed of in the court below, presents no reason whatever for dismissing the case now before this court on the ground that it was brought up prematurely. If the court had granted the motion to dismiss the petition of Ryan, that certainly would have been a final disposition of the case made by that petition, and consequently a denial of this motion is, under section 4250 of the code, subject to review by writ of error, that section authorizing the suing out of a bill of exceptions whenever “the decision or judgment complained of, if it had been rendered as claimed by the plaintiff in error, would have been a final disposition of the cause.”

2. The able jurist whose judgment is now under review, and who is deservedly distinguished for the clearness and accuracy of his legal judgment, but who, like all mortals, is not infallible, fell into the error of supposing that by the direction given in the case reported in 89 Georgia, supra, the object of this court was “to grant to Mr. Ryan a full rehearing of his case, just as if it never had been tried by any court before.” An examination of the opinion filed by Judge Clarke will show that by the language above quoted therefrom he meant to say that he understood thequestion of contempt or no contempt was reopened. ¥e had not supposed that the language used in this direction was susceptible of this construction.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 689, 92 Ga. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingsbery-v-ryan-ga-1893.