Mitchell v. Long

74 Ga. 94, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 74 Ga. 94 (Mitchell v. Long) 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
Mitchell v. Long, 74 Ga. 94, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 289 (Ga. 1885).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

The plaintiff moved to amend a judgment, by changing the name of defendant’s testator from TI. H. Long to W. H. Long, so as to make it conform to the pleadings in the case.

This motion was served upon the defendant, and he resisted it,

(1.) Because the suit was founded on a written contract made by the defendant after the death of the testator, and without authority of law, as appears by the declaration, upon which no legal judgment could have been rendered against the goods and chattels, etc., of the testator, in the hands of the defendant as his executor, to be administered.

(2.) Because the judgment sought to be amended is dormant, more than seven years, having elapsed from the rendition of the same before any proper execution; that after the expiration of seven years, it is too late to amend the j udgment, especially where it is dormant.

(3.) Because the amendment proposed would introduce a new party, who is a stranger to the record, into the judgment, which for that reason is not amendable; and instead of the plaintiff being allowed to amend, the defendant asked that the judgment be set aside, and that he be permitted to set up such defence to the original suit as he might be entitled to under the law for the protection of himself and the legatees under testator’s will.

[96]*96(4.) Because he, as executor of W. H. Long, had fully-administered his estate, and had been discharged by proper authority from the further administration of the same before the plaintiff’s suit was commenced and before the judgment on the same was rendered.

(5.) Because there was no process to the declaration upon which the judgment was obtained, and there could, therefore, be no legal judgment to amend.

The legatees under the will of W. PI. Long sought to intervene, and along with this executor to prevent this judgment from being amended, because, as they allege, testator’s estate had been distributed to them before the suit was brought and the judgment rendered; lhat they had no notice of it, or of the claim upon which it is founded; that, under such distribution, they took possession of the property assigned them, and have since held and claimed and occupied and possessed it as their own for more than four years; that the executor has none of the assets of the estate in his hands that could be reached by the judgment, if amended, and that he is wholly insolvent; that, if amended and made a valid judgment, it would affect only them and their property; that it is not for the debt of their testator, and his property is not chargeable with it; that defendant is no longer the executor of testator, but has been discharged from the trust by proper authority of law; that he was so discharged before the commencement of plaintiff’s suit, and that, if the debt was in fact the testator’s debt, it is barred as to them. They therefore pray to be made parties to plaintiff’s rule. No order appears in the record granting their prayer and making them parties, nor is there anything in it going to show that their application was considered, or that it influenced the judgment awarded on the motion. The court refused the amendment and set aside the judgment, upon the prayer of the defendant. The transcript shows that the judgment was awarded by the court in 1875, and the Motion to amend was made in 1888.

[97]*971. That the amendment asked is generally allowable, we ■ think is clear. The name of a defendant, inadvertently omitted in entering a judgment, may be inserted by amendment (29 Ga., 392); and if this be so, why may not an incorrect name, inserted by like fnistake, be amended, so as to correspond with the pleadings on which the judgment is founded? To ask is to answer the question.

2. None of the objections urged by the defendant to allowing the amendment should have been considered, except, it may be, that relating to process; they may have been good against the enforcement of the judgment, but were not admissible on a motion to amend. 29 Ga., 397.

3. The objection mainly relied on in argument here was that there was no process to the declaration on which the judgment was rendered, and therefore there could be no legal judgment to amend. The record, however, shows that there was a complete process in every respect save one. In this instance, it contained no direction whatever; the direction was wholly omitted. It is now insisted that for this omission the process is void, and is therefore no process.

Upon this assumption, the case was argued here at great length, and with marked ingenuity and abundant learning. The pleadings do not make the precise question argued. It should be plainly specified, and ought not to be disclosed by argument or inference simply. To supply an entire process is one thing; to aid, by amendment, one that is deficient in a single particular is another and quite a different thing. In the former case, there is nothing to amend by; in the latter, there is something Every court has power to amend and control its process and orders, so ■ as to make them conformable to law and justice, and to amend its own records so as to make them conform to the truth. Code, §206, sub-sec. 6. It is a fundamental principle of the law of amendments that there must be something to amend by (Code, §3479), for how can a thing that has no existance be amended? The difference between [98]*98creation and reformation is real and substantial, and is, moreover, self-evident. The cases in which a want of process has been held to render proceedings void, both before and since the adoption of the Code, are numerous 13 Ga., 217; 16 Id., 194; 17 Id., 67; 20 Id., 225; 31 Id., 503 ; 52 Id., 22.

The judiciary act of 1799, Cobb’s Dig., 471, provided in terms that “a process issuing in any other manner than therein directed should be null and void.” Before the interposition of the legislature, such process could not be waived, even- in writing, nor would appearance and pleading supply its want See cases above cited. Now, the defect is cured either by written waiver, or appearance and pleading. This is so well established that ■it would be waste of time to cite cases to the point, other than those referred to in Code, §3335 Under this legislation, the codifiers felt authorized to omit from the section ■ of the Code, §3334, prescribing the requisites of process, the provision contained in the judiciary act of 1799, declaring that process issuing otherwise than as directed should be .null and void. This provision was purposely ■ omitted, and, as we have seen, for good and sufficient reasons. The power to amend process given in sub-section ■ 6, §206, of the Code, is fully as broad and liberal as that allowed for the amendment of other pleadings. It is true that the Code, §3490, declares that “ void process, or where there is no process or waiver .thereof, cannot be amended.” But this section should be construed with others in pari materia, and effect should be given to each and all of the provisions bearing upon the subject. The fact that void process is associated with want of process and the waiver thereof is significan-. If the rule noseitur a soeiis is to apply in any case, it should apply in this, and the inference is strong, from the other terms with which it is so closely associated, that a process, in order to be void, in the apprehension of the law-givers, should be equally as inefficient as would be a total want.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Ga. 94, 1885 Ga. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-long-ga-1885.