Ross v. Edwards

52 Ga. 24
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 Ga. 24 (Ross v. Edwards) 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
Ross v. Edwards, 52 Ga. 24 (Ga. 1874).

Opinions

Warner, Chief Justice.

On the 24th day of December, 1869, Elizabeth Edwards, administratrix of James C. Edwards, deceased, made an affidavit, as required by law, that Philetus PI. Holt, as commissioner over Thomas Taylor, a lunatic, was indebted to her, as administratrix aforesaid, the sum of $12,781 25, besides interest, and that said Thomas P'aylor and said Philetus H, Holt, both reside out of this state. On the same day an attachment was issued commanding the sheriffs and constables of this state to seize so much of the property of Philetus PI. Holt, as commissioner over Thomas P'aylor, a lunatic, as will make* the aforesaid sum of money, and make return thereof to the next May term of the superior court of Bibb county. The attachment was levied by the sheriff on several lots of land and other property, as the property of the defendant in attachment, and returned to the court as directed, whereupon the plaintiff filed her declaration founded on said attachment, in which she alleged that said Philetus PI. Holt, as commissioner over Thomas Taylor, a lunatic, owed to and detained from her the sum of money aforesaid, under a contract made with her intestate and Thomas Taylor, in the year 1860, a bill of particulars of which is attached to the plaintiff’s declaration, in which is charged the amount of money for commissions, etc., as therein specified and set forth. At the May term of the [26]*26court the defendant, Holt, by his counsel, filed a demurrer to the plaintiff’s attachment and declaration ©n the ground that he could not be sued in the courts of this state as a committee of Thomas Taylor, a lunatic, for the reason that he had been appointed such committee by the supreme court of the state of New York, and was amenable to that court, and not liable to be sued in the courts of this state, and at. the same term of the court filed pleas in bar of the plaintiff’s action. Pending the suit on the-attachment proceedings, Taylor died, and Ross was appointed his administrator. At the October adjourned term of the court, 1871, Ross, by an order of the court, was made a party to the attachment suit pending against Holt, he consenting thereto, without a regular scire facias being issued for that purpose. On this state of the pleadings the case was tried, and the jury, under the charge of the court, found a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $11,031 25, with interest from 1st January, 1863. Ross, the administrator of Taylor, made a motion to non-suit the case at the trial, which was refused, and also made a motion in arrest of judgment, and for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, contrary to law, and for error in the charge of the court, and on several other grounds as set forth in the motion, all of which were overruled by the court on condition that the plaintiff would write off from the verdict all over the sum of $10,000 00, in that event, the plaintiff' to have leave to enter judgment against the defendant, Ross, de bonis testatoris, for that amount; to which rulings of the court Ross, as administrator of Taylor, excepted.

1. The first question to be considered is the motion of Ross, administrator of Taylor, to arrest the judgment against him, as such administrator, on the allegations contained in the plaintiff’s attachment and declaration founded thereon. The question is not whether the allegations in the attachment, and the declaration founded thereon, are sufficient to have authorized a judgment against Holt, the defendant therein, but whether there is any cause of action, or indebtedness alleged therein, against Taylor, the intestate of Ross, which wobld au[27]*27thorize a judgment to be rendered against him as the administrator of Taylor de bonis teslatoris. The affidavit of the plaintiff to obtain the attachment, alleges that Holt, as commissioner over Thomas Taylor, a lunatic, is indebted to her, as administratrix, the sum of $12,781 25. The attachment issued thereon commanded the sheriff to seize the property of Holt, as commissioner over Taylor, a lunatic. The attachment was levied by the sheriff on land and other property as the property of the defendant therein. The plaintiff, in her declaration founded on the attachment, alleges that Holt, as commissioner over Taylor, a lunatic, owes to and detains from her the sum of money claimed to be due her in the attachment affidavit. Who does the plaintiff allege in her attachment affidavit, and in her declaration, is indebted to her the sum of money claimed ? The legal effect of her allegations is that Holt is indebted to her the amount of money claimed, in his individual capacity. It is true that she alleges that Holt, as commissioner over Taylor, a lunatic, owes to and detains the money from her, but the addition of these words is only a description of the person who is indebted to her. The words “as commissioner over Thomas Taylor, a lunatic,” -has no legal or official significance, under the laws of this state. There is no officer here of that description who could be indebted to her, as such, in any official capacity, and therefore if Holt was indebted to her, as alleged, he must have been indebted to her in his individual capacity, as much so as if 'she had alleged that Philetus Holt, “carpenter,” or Philetus Holt, “ blacksmith,” was indebted to her. The attachment, and the declaration founded thereon, was a suit against Holt in his individual capacity, and the addition to his name “as commissioner of Thomas Taylor, a lunatic,” is nothing more, in contemplation of the laws of this state, than a mere description of the person sued. Holt is the defendant in the attachment suit, and when he appeared and pleaded thereto the court obtained jurisdiction of his person as to that suit. When Ross became the administrator of Taylor, if he discovered that the property of his intestate had been levied on by an attachment [28]*28issued against Holt, to satisfy a debt alleged to be due by him to tlie plaintiff therein, it was his right, as such administrator, to petition the court to be made a party to that attachment suit, for the purpose of protecting the estate of his intestate. Whilst it may be true that he could not object to the jurisdiction of the court, as to his person, (though he filed no plea, and was not the original defendant in attachment,) still he might raise any objections which would'defeat the plaintiff’s recovery in that suit, for the protection of his intestate’s estate, if it was necessary for him to do so. Ross, as the administrator of Taylor, did not represent Holt, the defendant in attachment; he was alive and represented himself. Ross, as administrator, only represented his intestate. His intestate was no party to the attachment suit in his lifetime, and Ross, as his legal representative, could not legally have been made a party thereto without his consent. When Ross, administrator, was made a party to the attachment suit against Holt, the proceedings therein continued to stand just as he found them; he filed no plea in the case, and there being no indebtedness of Taylor, the intestate of Ross, alleged by the plaintiff in her attachment affidavit, or in her declaration founded thereon, and no cause of action against the intestate of Ross alleged therein, which would have authorized a judgment de bonis testatoris to be rendered against him, as such administrator, he had the right to move the court to arrest the judgment against him on that ground, and, in our judgment, the court erred in overruling that motion, so far as the defendant Ross, administrator of Taylor, was concerned.

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Related

Hartley v. Hartley
161 S.E. 358 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
Zellner v. Cleveland
69 Ga. 631 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1882)
Edwards v. Ross
58 Ga. 147 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1877)

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ga. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-edwards-ga-1874.