Neal v. Lamar
This text of 18 Ga. 746 (Neal v. Lamar) 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
[748]*748 By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Having fully discussed this question in the case of Wooten & Co. vs. Nall, decided at this term of the Court, it is unnecessary for us to add the reason for our decision in this case. We content ourselves, therefore, with referring to the judgment delivered in that case, for the reasons which influence us to decide that the Court below' was right in holding, that if Col. Lamar had po interest in the suit, he was not incompetent as a witness, because he was nominally a party ,to the same.
We have no difficulty in recognizing the right and power an administrator, or administratrix, to do any such act for ,the benefit of the estate. Of course, he or she acts at his or her peril. If the act be for the interest of the estate, or if it be what should reasonably have been done, under the circumstances, for the promotion of the best interests of the .estate, the law will sustain and protect the trustee in the cx.ercise of such authority.
It is true that the release in question did not relieve Col. L. from liability to the plaintiff; and therefore, he could not be a competent witness to testify, generally, in the case. He might have been allowed to testify as to the character in which John Lamar signed the note, as this did not affect his liability to the plaintiff. The release, thus, would remove all interest springing out of his relations to the other parties in [749]*749the case, and render him competent to show the fact of the character in which John Lamar signed the note.
We are by no means prepared to hold that a judgment creditor may not, in good faith, indulge his debtor beyond the period of seven years, and have a return, in good faith, made by the proper officer, for the purpose of showing part payment, or execution to a certain extent. On the contrary, we hold that the Act was passed, as it shows for itself, to prevent fraudulent collusion between parties to judgments, for the purpose of wrongfully enforcing such judgments to the injury of bona fide creditors, and that this was the mischief, and the only mischief, intended to bo remedied.
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18 Ga. 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-lamar-ga-1855.