Roberts v. Moore

38 S.E. 402, 113 Ga. 170, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 198
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 28, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 402 (Roberts v. Moore) 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
Roberts v. Moore, 38 S.E. 402, 113 Ga. 170, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 198 (Ga. 1901).

Opinion

Fish, J.

J. A. N. Moore, as attorney in fact for Martha Moore, A. L. Terry, N. H. May, Margaret Duncan, Minnie Mack, and James Smith, and as next friend of John Deaton Jr., Hugh Deaton, and Rosa Deaton, and S. R. Moore, as attorney in fact for John Deaton, brought an equitable petition for the recovery of certain lands and the mesne profits of the same, and for injunction, against Cicero Roberts, Gr. W. Irwin, and others, in which they alleged that the lands sued for belonged to the estate of .William Deaton, deceased; that the persons named, in whose behalf J. A. N. and S. R. Moore respectively sued, were the heirs at law of said William Deaton, and, as such, the owners of and entitled to the possession of the lands sued for; that Roberts, Irwin, and the other defendants were each illegally in possession of a designated portion of these lands. In this suit the plaintiffs obtained a verdict and decree against the several defendants, in which they recovered of each of the defendants, separately, a described portion of the lands and the mesne profits thereon. Subsequently Roberts and Irwin brought the present1 action, the same being an equitable petition to set aside this verdict and decree, and, until the final hearing, to enjoin the plaintiffs therein from transferring or levying the executions issued thereon. They alleged that, some time before the time set for the hearing of the application for injunction in the case against them, they employed counsel to represent them, and that counsel on both sides agreed that the restraining order which had been granted should stand continued until the final hearing of the case; and that they stated to counsel for the plaintiffs “ that if he would examine the records in the ordinary’s office, he would find that the allegations in the petition [of his clients] [171]*171were not true, to which, said counsel replied that he had not had time to examine the records, but intended to do so, and if upon examination he found the averments not well founded, he would abandon the case, and petitioners would have no further trouble.” They further alleged, that, just prior to the term of the court to which the case was returnable, their counsel examined “the dockets, records, and papers of the clerk’s office, . . and found that said case had not been docketed, that the papers had never been returned and had not been recorded;” that their counsel was present at said term of the court, “ready to make answer, and that said case was not called, and again at the [trial term of the case], and still the case had not been docketed, nor the papers returned nor recorded, nor was said case called at any time ” during that term of the court; and that just prior to the next ensuing term of the court “ counsel examined the dockets, records, and papers of the clerk’s office of said court, and found no trace of said case.” They also averred that, immediately after the filing of the petition upon which the decree was rendered, the papers in the case were, by the counsel for the plaintiffs, taken out of the clerk’s office “and continuously kept out of said office, kept off the docket and record until the February term, 1898, nearly eighteen months, for the purpose of misleading petitioners as to the continuous pending of said suit, and that during the last-mentioned term, without any notice to your petitioners or their counsel, the counsel for [the plaintiffs] had the clerk to turn back and docket said case at the foot of the bench docket, where cases for the February term,-1897, were docketed, and then had the presiding judge to mark said case continued by the plaintiffs,” and immediately after this “took said papers from the clerk’s office and continuously kept them out (they never having been recorded) until during the August term, 1898, at which term said counsel procured [the] verdict and decree ” in question. They further alleged that the case had never been entered on the bar docket; and that, under the facts and circumstances set forth, they concluded that the counsel for the plaintiffs “ had examined the records of the ordinary’s office, and, finding that the charges in said petition could not be sustained, had, in accordance with his promise, abandoned said case.” It was also alleged that “they had perfect and complete answer to each and every charge in said petition, and would have made and filed the same and saved themselves harmless, had [172]*172they not been misled and defrauded as hereinbefore set out; ” and that these petitioners and those under whom they claim have a perfect title to said property, as will appear by exhibit1C ’ hereto annexed as part of this bill.” The defendants in the present case demurred to the plaintiffs’ petition, “ on the ground that the allegations therein set forth no legal cause of action, and did not entitle plaintiffs to the relief prayed for. The court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition at plaintiffs’ costs.” To this judgment plaintiffs excepted.

The question for our consideration and determination is, did the court err in sustaining the demurrer to the petition in this ease ? Granting that the allegations of the petition show that Roberts and Irwin were, by the fraud of the counsel of the adverse parties, unmixed with fraud or negligence on their part, prevented from setting up their defense to the suit in which the verdict and decree were rendered against them, the case then depends upon the character of the defense which they were prevented from making. Unless they show that they had a good defense, a court of equity will not set aside the verdict and decree of which they complain. “Equity will interfere to set aside a judgment of a court having jurisdiction only where the party had a good defense of which he was entirely ignorant, or where he was prevented from making it by fraud or accident, or the act of the adverse party, unmixed with fraud or negligence on his part.” Civil Code, § 4988. What was the defense which, for the reasons which they allege, they failed to make ? Upon this subject, they allege that they “ and those under whom they claim have a perfect title to said property, as will appear by reference to exhibit £C’” annexed to their petition. We must then refer to this exhibit to ascertain what this “ perfect title ” was, upon which they relied to defeat the action against them by the heirs at law of William Deaton, deceased. Turning to this exhibit, we find that it shows: a notice and citation by the ordinary of Jackson county, dated Oct. 8, 1874, in which, after stating that Elijah Deaton, administrator of William Deaton deceased, had applied for leave to sell the real estate of said deceased, “ all persons ” are notified and required to show cause, on the first Tuesday in December thereafter, why such leave to sell should not be granted; copies of two advertisements by said administrator of the sale of described land belonging to the estate of his intestate, one of the [173]*173advertisements covering one tract of land and being undated, and the other covering this tract and another one, and being dated Aug. 28, 1875 ; a deed, dated Dec. 6, 1881, to a certain described tract of land, from Elijah Deaton, as administrator of William Deaton deceased, to Bester Allen, containing recitals usual in such deeds, among -which is that the sale was had “ by virtue of an order of the court of ordinary of Jackson county, granted at the regular December term, 1874,” and that the sale was on the first Tuesday in December, 1881; a deed, dated Oct. 24, 1887, from Bester Allen to G. W. Irwin, conveying this same land; a deed,dated Dec. 5,1888, to a described tract of land, from Elijah Deaton, as administrator of William Deaton deceased, to W. I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 402, 113 Ga. 170, 1901 Ga. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-moore-ga-1901.