Zeagler v. Zeagler

15 S.E.2d 478, 192 Ga. 453, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 471
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 18, 1941
Docket13766.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 15 S.E.2d 478 (Zeagler v. Zeagler) 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
Zeagler v. Zeagler, 15 S.E.2d 478, 192 Ga. 453, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 471 (Ga. 1941).

Opinion

Reid, Chief Justice.

The origin and early history of this case may be found in the report of Zeagler v. Zeagler, 190 Ga. 220 (9 S. E. 2d, 263). We there held that the judge did not err in approving the auditor’s report. This meant that the petitioners were entitled to have the lands of the estate partitioned, but not to the other relief sought. When, on our judgment, the case went back to the trial court, the parties, as the present record shows by various recitals and correspondence between counsel, reached an agreement to abandon the case, though no formal order was entered. But acting on this agreement they initiated in the court of ordinary a statutory proceeding for partition of the same lands (Code § 113-1018); and after all appropriate compliance with the preliminary steps of such a proceeding the appraisers (in whose selection all of the parties had participated) qualified and assigned separate parcels of land to the various parties respectively, and filed in the court of their appointment a return of their findings. No caveat or objection to their return having been made within the required time, an appropriate judgment was entered by the ordinary, making said return final and the judgment of the court. Nothing was ever done by the parties about this judgment in that court. This was on November 12, 1940. Sometime thereafter a proceeding was brought in the superior court by the same persons who are plaintiffs in the present case, the alignment of all the parties being just as it is now and when this case was previously before this court. In this new proceeding some of the facts above recited were set forth, and it was contended that no partition of the lands had ever been made as recommended by the auditor and, as ruled by this court, could be made. It was alleged that what had been done in the court of ordinary was invalid, and that that court’s judgment was void because, as alleged, the agreement between the parties to abandon the case in the superior court and secure a partitioning on the lands by statutory method in the court of ordinary embraced a condition that the appraisers would divide the property in tracts of equal value and then allow them to be drawn by lot, but that instead, after the division was made, the appraisers assigned to the various parties their respective tracts, which it was alleged resulted in petitioners receiving tracts of less *455 value than those awarded to the others. Appointment of a receiver and injunction were asked. On January 23, 1941, Judge Harde-' man of the Middle Circuit (designated in lieu of Judge Evans,. disqualified) heard this proceeding to which defensive pleadings had been filed, and entered an order denying the relief prayed for. No exception was taken to this order, but on February 7, 1941, the plaintiffs filed with the clerk a paper stating: "Now come the plaintiffs in the above and foregoing cause, and dismiss the same without prejudice, either lawful or equitable, to either party, the same having been brought inadvertently by said plaintiffs.” On February 15, 1941, the plaintiffs appeared again in the superior court and filed an amendment to the original ease, containing substantially the same allegations as those set forth in the one considered by Judge Hardeman. The defendants filed a plea in bar. and a plea and answer setting up what is related above, as well as other matters, and contended that the plaintiffs were barred, not only by the adjudication in the court of ordinary, but by the judgment in the superior court rendered by Judge Hardeman, neither of which had been excepted to. Judge Graham, of the Oconee Circuit, presiding this time, denied the prayers of the amendment, which included relief sought by injunction and the appointment of a receiver. The correctness of this last ruling is tested by the present writ of error.

We have stated at some length in the outline of facts appearing above the rather ragged and multiple course of this litigation, in order to shorten what is here to be said in ruling upon the questions now made. After the judgment of this court in Zeagler v. Zeagler, supra, became final in the court below, there remained nothing to be done in reference to it except to carry out the recommendation of the auditor by appropriate proceedings to partition the lands between the parties. As in Cates v. Duncan, 181 Ga. 686 (183 S. E. 797), the original suit sought not only partition, but other relief equitable in nature. These other features had been eliminated by the findings of the auditor. Independently of the jurisdiction of this equitable proceeding the superior court has jurisdiction for the partitioning of lands between persons who are common owners. Code, § 85-1504 et seq. The court of ordinary likewise has jurisdiction for the division of estates in kind, and to this end, by proceedings similar to those provided for use in the *456 superior court, may cause lands to be partitioned. § 113-1018 et seq. The court of ordinary is a court of original, exclusive, and general jurisdiction of decedents’ estates (§ 24-1901), and as such it had ample jurisdiction and power to render the judgment between the parties which, as shown above, was rendered without objection or appeal. Thus, it can not be collaterally attacked or its effect avoided except in a direct proceeding for the purpose. Code, §§ 110-701, 110-708. We assume there would be no contention to the contrary if nothing else had happened except what transpired in that court. The theory of the plaintiffs apparently is that whereas the two courts had concurrent jurisdiction of the subject-matter, the superior court in the equity case had first assumed it, and therefore, so long as it had not been formally dismissed, the other court could exercise no jurisdiction. Code, § 37-122. They do not in the present proceeding seek to have the judgment in the court of ordinary set aside as having been obtained by fraud or for some other reason, and we make no intimation as to whether under the facts disclosed they might' do so. They merely ask that it be disregarded as void for want of jurisdiction.

“What is the essential test of jurisdiction of the subject-matter ? ‘In accordance with the general rule as to presumptions in favor of jurisdiction as against collateral attack, it is usually held that where a court has jurisdiction of cases ejusdem generis, its judgment in any case is not merely void; because its invalidity can not appear without inquiry into the facts, an inquiry which the court itself must be presumed to have made, and which will not, therefore, be permitted to be reviewed collaterally.’ 15 R. C. L. 863, § 337. In 7 R. C. L. 1029, § 57, it is said: ‘Jurisdiction of the subject-matter does not mean simply jurisdiction of the particular case then occupying the attention of the court, but jurisdiction of the class of cases to which that particular case belongs. As applied to the subject-matter of a suit, jurisdiction is always conferred by law, and it is incorrect to suppose that the power to decide in any case rests solely on the averments of a pleading, but on the contrary the- jurisdiction of a court in no way depends on the sufficiency or insufficiency of the pleadings, and if the pleadings state a case belonging to a general class over which the authority of the court extends, then jurisdiction attaches and the court has power to hear and determine the issues involved.’ If the particu

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.E.2d 478, 192 Ga. 453, 1941 Ga. LEXIS 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeagler-v-zeagler-ga-1941.