Thompson v. Mapp
This text of 6 Ga. 260 (Thompson v. Mapp) 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
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Besides, this bond is authorized by law. It is taken by the Sheriff for the benefit of the plaintiff. The claimanthad no right to exact a condition not authorized by the Statute; and as against the plaintiff in they?, fa. and the obligee in the bond, we should be inclined to declare it void.
The execution was levied the 12th of August, 1842. The bond was executed the 1st day of November thereafter. And Mapp, the claimant, swears that he had sold the negroes to Amos W. Hammond, about a month before that time. Did not this dispense with the necessity of a demand, even if the terms of the bond had required it? Jones vs. Barkley, Douglas, 684.
[263]*263The Statute under which this proceeding was had, is one among the many monuments of the wisdom of the General Assembly of 1847. It is worth, of itself, the entire expenditure of that session, ten times told. We are called on, for the first time, to give it a judicial interpretation. It needs none; it speaks for itself. Whatever the adverse party would be bound to answep upon a bill of discovery in a Court of Chancery, he is compelled to testify upon a commission under this Act. A Court of Equity will not force the defendant to make discovery when it would render him liable to a penalty or a forfeiture, or have a tendency thereto, or subject him to a criminal prosecution, or involve him in a breach of professional confidence as counsel, solicitor, attorney or arbitrator, &c. And the same objections, and none other, will apply to discovery when sought at Common Law. And, to prevent equivocation, it is enacted, that if the party to whom the in terrogatories are propounded, shall fail to make answer, “ in manner aforesaid,” that is, as fully as he would be compelled to do in Chancery, or shall answer evasively, the Court may attach him and compel him to answer in open Court, or it may continue the cause, and require more direct and explicit answers; or if the party sought to be examined, be defendant in the action, the Court may set aside his plea and give judgment against him by default; or if the plaintiff, may order his suit to be dismissed with cost, as shall, in the discretion of the Court, be deemed most just and proper.
The Legislature could have done no more to expedite and cheapen litigation. It only remains for the Courts to co-operate cordially with the law-making power, in the accomplishment of these great objects, by giving to this Acta liberal construction.
[264]*264So not only the factum of the contract may be established by oral proof, but the time also of its execution. A bill of sale of personal property, or a deed to land, may bear date prior to the period of their execution. They take effect from their delivery. Parol evidence, therefore, is always admissible to prove when the conveyance was executed and delivered. And for the foregoing purposes, the plaintiff should have been allowed to read to the Jury the answers of Mapp, the claimant.
The judgment must consequently be reversed, and the cause remanded.
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6 Ga. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-mapp-ga-1849.