Baker demurred generally, and by way of special demurrer alleged as follows : The quotation from his answer set forth in the accusation contains nothing contrary to law or to the duties which he owed to his client or the court as attorney at law. This quotation is simply made the basis or starting point for a long argumentative statement of conclusions, inferences and insinuations, instead of making direct and distinct charges of fact and intent, upon which issue could be joined. The accusation is general in its charge's and insinuations, but is not direct and specific, as good pleading and justice to the defendant require it should be. Bor example, it charges him with deceiving the master by charging that no such compromise was made, without pretending to state a single word used by him in argument or otherwise before the master. The accusation perverts the quotation from his answer to the rule of 8. K. Moor, and interprets it as meaning that only $500 was legally due on tliafi.fa., and that the compromise was legally valid and could be set up and maintained in law. Nothing of this sort appears in the quotation, but the accusation assumes that it is so contained, and therefrom the inference is drawn that defendant suggested the suppression of the truth, etc. In fact, the whole of the charges contained in the accusation are based on a misinterpretation of this quotation and consist in argument and inference of the pleader. Exception is taken to the overruling of the general and special demurrers.The original accusation was brought on August 1, 1888. Ten days afterwards an amendment thereto was filed, in which the relator prayed that in each place where the accusation is made by him against Baker, it be so changed as to appear that the accusation is made in the name of the State of Georgia upon the information of A. S. Johnson. In this amendment are the following allegations: Baker, having been informed of said compromise and having disobeyed the instructions of his client who directed him to see the representative of Johnson’s estate and know if she would abide by the compromise, suggested that it be ignored and the full amount apparently due on the fi.fa. and judgment be collected, and although he knew that the apparent amount was not in fact due, he undertook and contracted to collect the same upon condition that S. K. Moor would pay him, or allow him to retain half of said amount; by which contract Baker became directly and pecuniarily interested in the suppression of the compromise contract, in disproving the same, and in disproving any payment upon they? fa. or the judgment upon which it was predicated. Not satisfied with the information given him by his client or her agent, of the payment which had been made on the fi. fa. and judgment by A. Johnson in his lifetime. Baker required his client and her agent to make affidavit of the amount due thereon, which they did, swearing that $300 had been paid thereon, and they sent this affidavit to Baker who has retained it in his possession ever since , but neither he nor his client, nor any one for them, has ever entered said payment on the fi. fa. Afterwards Baker, appearing before "W. K. Moore, the master, and wholly failing to enter as a credit the payment which had been made on the fi. fa. and judgment, and omitting to mention the same or bring it to the attention of the master that the just and true balance due thereon might be allowed by him, offered the fi. fa. as evidence of the true amount due thereon (though knowing of the payment which had been made); and they?, fa. having been received by the master, Baker announced his case closed, knowing that by the allowance of the same in full he would, by the terms of his contract with S. K. Moor or her agent, receive at least $150 and interest more than he would receive should he inform the master of the truth by crediting the fi. fa. with $300 which his client had sworn had been paid thereon, or informing the master of the payment. And after the fi. fa. had been so received, the representative of Johnson’s estate introduced evidence to ^how payments upon the fi. fa. and a compromise thereof, and Baker, though knowing of the payment shown by the affidavit of his client, did nevertheless introduce as a'witness A. P. Moor, he being duly sworn, and by questions propounded to him procured from him a denial both of the fact of the compromise and that any payment had been made on the execution and judgmerit or the compromise agreement, and Baker knowing that he would profit, and intending to profit by the failure to enter the credit upon the execution, contended and argued to the master that the full amount apparently due thereon was in fact due. Thereafter, the $1,600 having been paid to Baker by the receiver of the estate, Baker wrote to A. P. Moor, agent for S. K. Moor, on November 21, 1887, that he had, after paying witnesses and everything else, only about $500, and then had to pay MeCutchen $50 for helping him in the ease ; whereas Baker has since sworn in the rule case of S. K. Moor against him (to recover said money or a part of it) that he had not paid out on account of witness fees and everything else over $75 or $100, and that he had not paid MeCutchen $50 or any other sum for helping him in the case; and the relator avers these two statements as last made to' be the truth, and that Baker, when he wrote the statements contained in the letter, intended to deceive his client, knowing them to be false, and having collected said money he failed to pay over the same, or any part thereof, until -, when he paid over half of it to S. K. Moor and refused to pay the other half or any part of it; and finally, when called on by rule to show cause why he should not pay over the other half, less $165.50 proposed to be allowed him by his client, he pleaded and swore as set out in the original accusation; and after that accusation was served upon him, he amended his answer to the rule of S. K. Moor and pretendingly pleaded that he had been mistaken when he stated, m his original answer to that rule, that he had collected the whole amount apparently due on the ft. fa. against the Johnson estate, and that in fact he had not collected the-full amount. Yet notwithstanding said answer he still refused and omitted to pay or offer to pay the $827 50 or any part of it, but went to trial on the issue made by said pleadings, and thereon produced and put in evidence the letters of A. P. Moor, agent of S. K. Moor, wherein Baker was distinctly informed of the compromise agreement and of the fact that $500 had been paid on the compromise of the judgment and fi. fa. by Johnson in his lifetime; and also put in evidence the affidavit of the Moors wherein they both swore that $300 had been paid on the fi. fa. and judgment; and by himself and his counsel argued to the court and jury that if the fund then in litigation was an unholy fund, obtained from Johnson's estate by the joint fraud of himself 'and the Moors, the jury should leave the parties where they found them, and read authority to sustain said position-And although the jury found against Baker in that; cause, he still retains said money and refuses to pay it’ over to his client. The relator further shows that in 1888, Baker having been employed to collect the fi. fa. of Thompson Anderson, survivor of Allison, Anderson & Company, against E. D. Graham, and having heard that a fi. fa. in favor of Graham & Graham, one of whom was E. D. Graham, against Cora M. Gray, had been in some way or to some extent transferred to W. H. Howard, applied to Howard to learn whether the transfer had been made and the facts of the same. Howard and Baker being upon friendly terms, Howard having often assisted him pecuniarily, he, knowing Howard’s feelings towards him and believing that on account thereof Howard would the more freely communicate any information he possessed, told Howard that he, Baker, owned the fi. fa. of Thompson Anderson against E. I). Graham; and afterwards in the superior court on the trial of the rule case of Graham & Graham against Franklin, to distribute the money Cora M. Gray had paid on the fi. fa. of Graham & Graham against her, Baker, then claiming the same on the fi. fa. of Thompson Anderson against Graham, and attempting to set aside the transfer of said ft. fa. against Gray to Howard, testified that he did not own the ft. fa. of Thompson Anderson against E. D. Graham, and being asked if he had not told Howard that he owned said ft. fa., answered “I did”; and being asked, “Was that true?” answered “No”; and being then asked, “ Did you tell Howard the truth, then ? ” answered “ No ” ; and being then asked, “You swear now you told Howard a falsehood?” answered “Yes.”The amendment just set forth was allowed on August 10, 1888. The first demurrers by the defendant were filed on July 15, 1889, and were considered by the judge in connection with his consideration of the ca'se generally upon its merits on the evidence. At the same time and in the same connection Baker demurred to the amendment j ust stated, on the grounds as taken in the first part of the special demurrer, except only as to the portion of the amendment touching his failure to enter a credit on the ft. fa. against Johnson’s estate for money which he did not collect and was not collected by S. K. Moor after the ft. fa. was placed in his hands, which charges he says seem to be based on a misapprehension of the duties of an attorney at law. Further objecting, he says that the charges set forth in the amendment are not legally sufficient as to that portion which relates to what he said to Howard and what he testified in relation thereto, because it does not charge any breach of duty or bad faith towards any client or any court, but amounts simply to an allegation that he admitted with more than usual promptness, under oath, that a statement he had previously made to a third person was incorrect, without further explanation. He also says that the portion of the amendment referring to what he had written to S. K. Moor in relation to the money collected by him, and the charges made against him in connection therewith, are indefinite, vague and insufficient, and do not make any case against Mm; but that the accusation shows that he claimed a conditional fee of one half as due by contract, and that he sought only to retain what he insisted the contract authorized him to retain. Another ground of this demurrer is, that the accusation does not attach as an exhibit a full copy of Ms answer from which the quotation is made, which quotation is made the basis of the accusation, nor does it otherwise set forth the substance of the whole of his answer. — One of the grounds for new trial is, that the court erred in allowing the amendment to which the demurrer just stated relates, over Baker’s objections that it involved a new and distinct accusation against him, in no way connected with the original accusation, which ruling was made during the trial of said ease. This ground then states that the amendment was allowed by Judge Fain, and that Judge Maddox who tried the ease passed no order therein.The amendment just recited was sworn to. Other amendments filed July 8th, 25th and 26th, August 23d, and November 6th, 1889, were not sworn to, and on each one of these is entered by the respondent an objection to its sufficiency and a denial of the charges therein. The motion for new trial complains of error in overruling the respondent’s objections to the sufficiency of each and every accusation against him, and of error in allowing the amendments now to be stated, because none of them were verified by the oath of the relator. The judge certifies that the ground as to failure to verify was not mentioned before him. The amendment of July 8, 1889, alleged as follows: On May 10,1889, came on to be heard the cause of J. A. Baker v. S. K. Moor, which was a motion to set aside the verdict rendered against him in favor of 8. K. Moor; whereupon Baker moved to continue said motion for a new trial, and for cause to continue stated upon oath that Q. L. Bell in'April, 1889, had told him that if ho, Baker, had known the character of A. P, Moor (who was a material witness against Baker on the trial of the case of S. K. Moor against Baker), he, Baker, would not have lost his cause, that he could get affidavits at Gumming, Georgia, to impeach Moor, and that he, Bell, and his father would give Baker affidavits as to Moor’s bad character tending to impeach him; and that said Bell at the same time and place told him to come over there, and he, Bell, would help Baker in getting up affidavits to impeach Moor ; and that that was the first intimation Baker had had that Moor could be impeached. Upon this showing Baker secured the continuance he moved for. In truth Bell never told Baker that he could get affidavits as to Moor’s bad character tending to impeach him, nor that he would help Baker get said affidavits ; on the contrary, he told Baker he did not think Moor could be impeached in Gumming, Georgia, and he never told Baker at any time that Moor could be impeached anywhere, at any time or under any circumstances. The statements of Baker so made to the court were wilfully and knowingly false in that he swore that the alleged conversation he had with Bell in April, 1889, was the first intimation that he had that Moor could be impeached, when in truth Baker himself had stated in a letter written by him to Bell on March 21, 1889, that he had been informed that it would not be a very difficult matter to impeach Moor in Forsyth county. The statements so made by Baker to the court were solely to deceive the court and secure a continuance of the motion for a new trial; and having so made the statements, he argued the same and insisted upon their truth and legal sufficiency. — The motion for new trial alleges that the court erred in allowing this amendment over the respondent’s objections that it introduced a new and distinct accusation against him, in no way connected with or explanatory of the original accusation, and that it appears therefrom that the matters therein charged against him all transpired after the filing of the original accusation, and did not exist at the commencement of the proceedings.The amendment of July 25,1889, alleged as follows: On February 21, 1888, Baker having been employed by "W". E. & J. R. Puckett, legatees under the will of E. D. Puckett, deceased, and knowing that E. D. Graham, a member of this bar in good standing, had been employed to represent and was then representing, as attorney, Mrs. Emily Puckett, executrix of E. D. Puckett, wrote to said executrix, among other things, to wit: “My firm represents ¥m. E. & Jas. R. Puckett, who, are legatees under the will and, as you well know, stand in the greatest, in fact the only danger, in consequence of your not paying the debts of your testator. I am not mad, neither are my feelings the slightest ruffled at you for interposing the claim to the levy on the lands of Mrs. Lary. I am satisfied you are acting under the advice of your counsel, who I must say only desires to get you involved in long, tedious and expensive litigation, that he may have the harvest he had in the Tumlin case, and get as a lawyer more out of the estate than any one of Tumlin’s heirs has yet been able to get. And in my judgment, if you go on following Graham’s advice in the administration of that estate, you will squander everything you have, and everything Capt. Puckett left those two little children of yours, that the old man tried so hard to provide bountifully for. Graham undertook to represent Mrs. Cora Gray, and is now suing her for about two thousand dollars attorney’s fees. He undertook to represent Mrs. Dick Roberts, and to-day, while her husband left her good property, she has not one cent of it, and has had to pay me out of her own estate over one hundred and fifty dollars besides other amounts; and all of this where there was no necessity for it whatever, except to make fees for which he stood sorely in need. These are notorious facts known of all men, and should be known by you. As long as you listen to Graham you never will pay a cent of the indebtedness of that estate, but will hold back and make no effort to wind the estate up, and have me moving to remove you, and to have you give bond, etc., etc., and you resisting it and lawing and paying fees out of the estate to Graham, which will finally come out of you, and a thousand other things to bedevil, worry, harass and annoy you and everybody else, and take the money of that estate to be by you and Graham tried to be saddled on my clients, and their property taken to pay it. Now your duty is plain, and you should proceed at once to sell such property as is set apart in the will to pay debts, and pay them; and then turn over to yourself, as guardian of your children, what is going to them, and then be discharged from the executorship, for then the estate is fully administered. But instead of doing that (and your common sense will tell you that is right), you will listen to Graham and wait until after the 12 months expire, and then you will become liable to suit. Everybody begins to sue and levy upon the estate, and here it goes and the estate is wasted. Now as you have written me and caused me to believe that up to this time you have been misled by Graham, I am determined you shall have a fair chance to do right, and then if you get into trouble it will be your own fault. I will not move against you on the first Monday in March as I intended to do, but will wait until first Monday in April and then move, if something is not done towards winding up that estate. I know I do not bear you the slightest ill will, but do sincerely desire you to go on and administer the estate and have no trouble, and will render yon any aid in my power to properly aid you, and would not charge you one cent, and make you this offer to convince you of my sincerity in all that I say. "With the best of wishes, I am very truly, J. A. Baker. P. S. Judge Iloward concurs in every word I have said about the proper administration of that estate. J. A. B.” The allegations against Graham are each and all untrue and slanderous; and it was wilful misconduct in Baker thus to attempt to induce Mrs. Puckett to cease to act upon the advice of her chosen attorney, and to endeavor to induce her to abandon him and accept in lieu thereof his own so-called advice. — The motion for new trial alleges that the court erred in allowing this amendment and in overruling the respondent’s objection that a new and distinct cause of action was thereby added to the original accusation, which new and distinct ground was in no way connected with the original accusation.The amendment of July 26, 1889, alleged that after the original information in the present case had. been served upon Baker, he amended his answer to the rule of S. K. Moor,by alleging that his original answer thereto was mistakenly made in that he swore that he had succeeded in collecting the whole amount due on the fi.fa.; and in said amendment he admitted that the compromise agreement had been allowed by the master, and that he had not collected the full amount of the fi.fa.; and on the trial of the rule case he swore that the master allowed the compromise agreement and did not allow the full amount of the fi. fa. Notwithstanding all of which he still fails and refuses to pay over to S. K. Moor any part of the $827.15 remaining in his hands. — The motion for new trial alleges that the court erred in allowing this amendment and in overruling the respondent’s objections, which were the same as those made against the amendments just above stated.The amendment of August 23, 1889, alleged that Baker voluntarily approached B. II. Jones who had an execution against the Pyrolusito Manganese Company for $19.05 principal, besides interest and costs, and represented to Jones that he, Baker, could collect the execution, and if Jones would turn it over to him he would do so, and as an attorney and a man he would guarantee its collection. Thereupon Jones turned it over to him as an attorney for collection, and he thereupon caused it to be levied on an ore-washer and fixtures, as the property of the defendant in execution, and caused the same to be advertised for sale, and at the sale caused the same to be knocked off at $11, and then sold the same to the alleged bidder for $75, having before the sale bargained it, and only paid over to Jones $9.95 and pocketed the difference between $11 and $75, and still retains the same, concealing his couduet in the premises from Jones and refusing to pay over to him the amount due on the execution, and still retains and withholds from the manganese company the difference between the amount of the execution and the purchase price of the property. — The motion for new trial alleges that the court erred in allowing this amendment and in overruling the respondent’s objections thereto, on the grounds that no time is therein alleged as to when the matters occurred, and the same is barred by the statute of limitation, and that it seeks to add new and distinct grounds of accusation in no way connected with the original accusation.The amendment of November 6, 1889, alleged that upon this trial and in argument before this court, the defendant falsely stated that Mrs. Emily R. Puckett opened the correspondence with him, upon which and in consequence of which the letter quoted in the amendment of July 25th was written; and as evidence of this charge the relator tenders the letter of Baker & Heyward of February 20, 1887.The motion for a new trial contains the general grounds that the j udgment is contrary to law and evidence, and the following special grounds :Error in refusing to continue the case when the amendment allowed and filed on July 26, 1889, was made, Baker and his counsel both stating that they were surprised by the amendment, that it made a new and distinct ground which they were then not prepared to meet, and that they could procure evidence tp meet and overcome it; Baker’s statement being made under oath. This motion was made on the 25th and 26th of July, 1889; the case was passed from then to the 4th and 5th of November, when the court heard all competent evidence offered by either party.Error in overruling Baker’s objections to the following testimony of A. • W. Eite: Q. “ State whether or not Mr. Baker was present during the entire trial ” (referring to the trial of the rule case of S. K. Moor v. J. A. Baker). A. “ Well, sir, he was here and might have gone out, and no doubt did for a few minutes during the trial.” Q. “State whether or not James B. Conyers addressed the court and jury upon the argument of that case.” A. “Yes, sir, he made an argument before the jury.” Q. “State whether or not he read any authority and took any position m regard to the court leaving the parties where they found them, if this was an unholy fund.” A. “Yes, sir, he took that position, argued to the jury and read authority from the Supreme Court, and asked Judge Fain to charge the jury that if Moor and Baker confederated together and defrauded the Johnson estate, that Mrs. Moor, the wife of Moor who was acting as agent, could not recover in this case, and that the courts would leave them where they found them. Mr Conyers read authority and asked the court to charge the jury on that point.” The objections were, that there was no charge or accusation authorizing any such testimony; that it showed the acts of James B. Conyers and not of Baker; that it was irrelevant; that Baker was not shown to have been present or in any way assenting to it; an d that Conyers was Baker’s counsel in that case, his positions were his own, and Baker was not responsible for them.Error in admitting the following testimony of A. S. Johnson: Q. “ Bid you hear the position taken by brother Conyers in regard to this being an unholy fund ?” (referring to the fund claimed in the Moor rule case). A. “Yes, sir.” Q. “Whatdid he say?” A. “I can’t give his exact words; he read to the court on the question that where the fund was an unholy fund and fraudulently obtained, that the court would not help either party, and argued to the jury that if they found it was an unholy fund, the courts would not have anything to do with it. lie did not say that it was an unholy fund, but if the jury should so find.” The objections were the same as those urged against the admission of the testimony of Eite.Error in admitting, over objections that it was irrelevant and immaterial, the following testimony of E. B. Graham: Q. “ What amount of fees did you receive from that estate ?” (referring to the estate of E. B. Puckett). A. “ 1 have received thirty-two dollars. I prepared an account before the master for $150, and gave them credit for the amount received. Q. “ Has he allowed it ?” A. “ I don’t think he has reported. I afterwards appeared for her when the will was probated.” Q. “ What are your charges ? Are they reasonable ?” A. “ I think they are quite low.”Error in rejecting the following testimony given on the cross-examination of W. K. Moore, a witness introduced by the relator, and shown to be a lawyer of several years practice, and this testimony being offered as expert evidence : Q. “ If Mr. Moor had come to you and told you that he had received about $1,200 on this fi. fa., and that he had ascertained from Maxwell & Vincent that they had paid their money to Col. Johnson, and had paid it on the Dysart & Vincent debt, Johnson being the means through which the money had been paid, and that it took little, the rise of $1,200, to pay the compromise of the Dysart & Vincent claim, and insisted that when he made that affidavit that he did not know what Maxwell & Vincent would swear, was still open for about half, that he got it from Johnson and that it had been paid upon the fi. fa. of Vincent, and that he had discovered that it came from Dysart & Vincent from Johnson, don’t you think that it would be the duty of Baker to go on and insist that the Johnson fi.fa. had nothing paid on itj1” A. “I think so.” Q. “Then suppose that your client was to tell you that Col. Bell had compromised this case with Johnson, and that he had discovered that he had never paid a cent — ” The court here interrupted by stating that “ what Col. Moore thinks about this under the same circumstances, and what he would have done, is ruled out.”Error in admitting, over objection that it was írrelevant, hearsay and illegal, the following testimony: Q. to Baker by Akin: “ Did not Mr. Eite, upon the motion when you made your motion to continue your motion for a new trial in the S. K. Moor rule case, did not Mr. Eite then and there state to the court under oath that he had a conversation with Geo. Bell, in which Geo. Bell denied having the conversation with you which you had testified about before the court?” A. “Yes, sir.” Error in admitting, over objection that it was hearsay and irrelevant, a long itemized account made out by A. M. Eoute, showing that he had as attorney for Mrs. A. N. Roberts, executrix of R. C. Roberts, deceased, made collections from seventy-nine different parties, and had collected the sum of $3,237.05, for which he had charged commissions to the amount of $323.70.”Error in admitting in evidence, over objection that it was hearsay and irrelevant, the petition of Mrs. Emily R. Puckett against Thomas M. and William E- Puckett et al., filed on January 18, 1889, alleging that E. D. Puckett died testate and his will, a copy of which was annexed, was proved in common form October 3, 1887, and letters testameutary were issued to the plaintiff, and on February 6,1888, the will was proved in solemn form; that the testator owed some debts the exact amount of which the plaintiff could not state, but set forth twenty-three persons and firms to whom he was indebted in the aggregate sum of $1,102.95 ; that commissioners to sot apart a year’s support for the plaintiff and two minor children were appointed on April 2, 1888, and had assigned $750 in money to be realized out of the property of the estate, which report and assignment wore made the judgment of the court on September 8, 1888; that since her qualification the executrix had paid debts out of the property of the estate, amounting to $682.38, which includes $328.78 paid to year’s support, the other amounts going to eighteen different persons, among which was $32 to E. I). Graham; that she has assented to all the legacies, except Kittie Larey, James R. Puckett and William E. Puckett; that R. W. E. Jones on a fraudulent claim has sued her; that there is not enough property to pay his debts outside of specific legacies; that several parties have sued her and others are threatening suit and collection by executions; that claims will be filed by different legatees, and thus many suits will arise; that she is advised that it was the intention of the testator to charge the legacy of William E. Puckett and James R. Puckett with payment of the debts, in the event the property set apart for that purpose proved insufficient, and if this is correct, the property bequeathed to them should be sold to pay the debts, but William E. and James R. insist that the rents alone should go to pay debts, and a conflict of legal opinion exists about this, and doubt as to construction of the will. To prevent multiplicity of suits she prayed for construction and direction, for injunction against creditors and that they be required to come into court and prove their claims, for guardian ad litem for children, and for general relief and process. The bill also specified other property not mentioned or specifically devised by the will. The will gave certain lands to William E. and James R. Puckett jointly, but directed that they he retaiued in possession of the executrix and rented out, and the proceeds he applied to the payment of all the testator’s debts, and then be turned over to William E. and James R. Puckett and not before. The hill was sanctioned and ordered filed and restraining order was granted on January 17, 1889; and the cause was referred to J. M. Neel as special master on March 2, 1889.Error in admitting, over objection, the following testimony of George L. Bell: “ 2d direct interrogatory. Please state whether or not you ever received any letter or communication from J. A. Baker relating to impeaching A. P. Moor. If yea, please state when, and attach the original, properly identified, to your answer. Did or did you not reply to said communication ? If yea, attach copies of the same, properly identified, to your answers; if you have not copies, give their substance as nearly as you can, and state where the originals are. A. I did. The letter is in my office at Cumming, Ga. I cannot, therefore, attach it to my answers. I replied to said communication. I have no copies of my reply. I do not remember date of Baker’s letter, hut it was before spring term of Pickens superior court. 3d direct interrogatory. Please state whether or not you told said J. A. Baker at Jasper, Ga., in April, 1889, or at any other time or place, that he could get affidavits at Cumming, Ga.,. or anywhere else, to impeach said Moor, and that you and your father would give affidavits of Moor’s had character tending to impeach him, or if you would help said Baker to get said affidavits? Bid yon or did you not ever tell said Baker at any time or place that the said A. P. Moor could be impeached by affidavits procured from any designated locality ? State fully all that was said between you and said Baker on this subject.” A. “I did not. I did not. I did not. I did not. I do not remember everything that was said on this subject. "Wo talked several times during the week about Baker’s case. I asked Baker when I first met him if he had received my reply to his letter. lie said that he had, and that he intended to go over to Forsyth county and see what he could do towards getting affidavits to impeach Moor. I told him that he might be able to get them in the lower portion of our county where Moor had last resided, but I did not know. I asked him to come to my house and be my guest when he visited our couuty. As he wont to leave Jasper and I bade him good-bye, I remarked in a general way that if I could be of service to him he could command me. I also told him, during some of the conversations had with him, that Moor was rather a troublesome man. I stated further to him that I had collected $100 from Col. A. Johnson for Moor, for which I had received no pay. That is the substance of my conversation with him.” The objection was, that by the first interrogatory and the answers quoted, it was sought to give and did give the contents of writings, and that by both the interrogatories and answers the object was to charge and convict the defendant of false swearing or perjury, and that to do so he must be confronted by the witnesses. The objection was also in writing on the interrogatories at the time they were sued out. When the objection was • made to the court, counsel for the relator stated that the letters alluded to by the witness were in existence and would be produced, and afterwards the following letters were read in evidence.“ Cartersville, G-a., March 21st, 1889.“Hon. Geo. L. Bell: Dear Sir, — I am in some important litigation with Andrew P. Moor, and in the course of his testimony he swears knowingly and corruptly false. He is a new comer here and not generally known, in fact known very slightly. I have been informed that it would not be a very difficult matter to impeach him in Forsyth Co. Please let me know how this is, and I will go over and see about it.“ Yours truly, etc. J. A. Baker.”To this letter was attached the affidavit of Geo. L. Bell that the above letter was the letter called for by the subpoena duces tecum and it was the only letter called for in his posession, etc., when served with the subpoena.“Gumming, Ga., March 30, 1889.“Mr. J. A. Baker: Dear Sir, — Your favor of the 21st inst. has been received. In regard to the impeachment of A. P. Moor, I expect it would be difficult to do, owing to the fact that for several years past he has been moving from one place to another, and has not resided in any community long enough to show general character. Of course, if you were to undertake it you would want to successfully discredit him. This is my opinion about it, and I write it candidly. I am sorry you are having trouble with him. He is a troublesome man to deal with. Yours truly, Geo. L. Bell.”Error in admitting, over objections, the following testimony of George E. Sims by interrogatories : “ I heard Geo. L. Bell read a letter he had written J. A. Baker in 1889, relative to the impeachment of A. P. Moor. I heard Geo. L. Bell read a letter from J. A. Baker on the same subject. I have neither the originals or copies. Baker wrote Bell, stating he had been informed A. P. Moor could be impeached in this county, and asked if it could be done. Bell wrote Baker that in his judgment said Moor could not be impeached in this county. This was the latter part of March, 1889.” The objections were substantially the same as those taken in the ground just preceding this one; and it was further objected that there was nothing to show that the letter from Bell to Baker was ever sent or mailed to Baker, and that the original was not accounted for by the witness. Counsel for the relator stated that the letters were in existence and would be produced; and afterwards during the trial, letters of similar purport were read in evidence.Error in admitting the following testimony of R. H. Jones, over objection that it was hearsay and irrelevant: “The first I knew of the levy on thej7. fa., I was passing by Wolf Pen court one day, and Mr. Jenkins, the bailiff, asked me if I was not going to get out, and I said, for what? ‘Well,’ he [replied], ‘you have a case here to-day. You have got some property levied on here,’ and I said, ‘I reckon not,’ and he said, ‘Yes, you have,’ and I asked him who was representing me, and he said, Mr. Baker. He said that Johnson was there representing Baker, and I remarked that I had nothing to do with it. And also Jenkins said, ‘You had better stay here and see that it brings your claim,’ and I told him I was to get my money anyhow.”Error in admitting, over objection that it was irrelevant and hearsay, the petition of Adelaide N. Roberts, executrix, against J. R. Willmore et al., filed on May 3, 1886, in Bartow superior court, for injunction, direction and marshalling assets: The bill sets out the creditors of the estate; shows herself to be executrix. The assets of which testator died possessed are of the value of $6,000. Pleads known business inexperience. Says she consulted A. M. Eoute as attorney. Thought that the estate was amply solvent, therefore made no application for year’s support. Alleges much complication in the business with W. W. Roberts, and that she arbitrated with W. W. Roberts and' was surprised at the result of the arbitration. She intrusted A; M. Route to collect debts due the estate and pay debts owing by the estate, and followed his advice. He finally furnished her with a statement showing that he had collected $8,237, and paid $2,918 ; and that he elaimédfees $343, the balance in his hands being insufficient to pay him; She and Route have collected about $4,000, and paid all out but about $200 used by herself the first year. All the solvent claims have been collected, and the only assets consist of $100 worth of corn and an equitable interest in a farm. Sets forth the suits of Willmore, and says that ft. fa. is in the hands of sheriff. Sets forth. an indebtedness to Nancy Barnwell, and to James E.. Stephens, executor, A. M. Route and R. H. Jones, and', that to all these suits plene administravit must be pleaded.. Shows that she and her minor children are entitled to-year’s support. Prays for injunction, and that the estate-be distributed by decree of the court, etc. Signed by Graham & Graham, plaintiff’s solicitors. The court on May 2d, 1886, sanctioned the bill and restrained all the parties, and set the case for a hearing on the 1st Monday in June, 1886. It was then continued to 3d Monday in June, 1886. On the 3d Monday in.June, the court enjoined all parties until the final hearing;, except J. R. Willmore’s suit against Mrs. Roberts to fix lieu individual responsibility. Service of said bill was- acknowledged by J. A. Baker, attorney for J. R. Will-more, May 3d, 1886. The answer of J. R. Willmore was, in brief, as follows: Defendant admits that testator died in possession of a farm near Adairsville, Ga., but denies that it is only of the supposed value of $500, and says that it was appraised at $1,590 over and above incumbrances. Denies that plaintiff only received personal property of the value of $1,000, but says that was worth $2,480.70, what it was appraised at, and that plaintiff returned the items showing this-to. be. a trueinventory, and swore that it was “ true, just and correct” ; that the notes received by plaintiff were worth and appraised at $5,064.84, none of which were appraised as insolvent or desperate, and that nearly all are on solvent parties, and at the lowest estimate are worth $4,000; that the open accounts were appraised at $2,057.71, making a total óf $7,122.55, instead of $6,000 as alleged.; and that of the accounts plaintiff should have collected at least $1,500. Defendant charges that on :20th May, 1885, plaintiff collected of D. J. Guyton .$728.82, one half belonged to the estate ; that she has ■an. award against W. W. Roberts for $1,010.40, and that this is not disputed. Defendant admits plaintiff’s inability to attend to the business of the estate, and this is the direct and sole cause of the complications in the business of the estate. Defendant charges that plaintiff sold 'all the personal estate except such things as she wanted, but for some sinister purpose fails and refuses to make out and return a true and correct sale bill. Defendant does not know how plaintiff transacts her business as between herself and her attorney-at-law, A. M. Route, whether she takes the advice of her counsel or not, but - is informed that she fails to do so. Nor does he know whether plaintiff knew the condition of the estate or not; she has been in possession of all the assets and data since June 22, 1883, and if she don’t know, it is due to her carelessness and ineompetenoy; she should have known. Defendant makes a part of his answer a part of plaintiff’s returns to the ordinary as executrix, wherein she shows that she has paid on open accounts $1,575.61, some of the accounts made after the death of testator; that she has paid notes in full, amounting to $302,53; that in law these should only prorate with defendant, but she did right in paying them, because the estate 'was solvent so far as notes were concerned, and she ought to pay defendant. The true state of matters is, that the estate is worth, solvent notes, $4,000 ; solvent accounts $1,500 ; Guyton matter, $364.41; Adairsville farm,above mortgages, etc., $1,500; personal property," $2,480.70 ; four hundred and seventy bushels of corn, '$235; total, $11,180.51. The debts will not approximate this sum. Shows that defendant’s debt was on note, and that judgment had been recovered ; and prays that restraining order be dissolved, that plaintiff be enjoined from further meddling with the estate, and that a receiver be appointed, and general relief. J. A. Baker, def ts sol’r. This answer sworn to by J. A. Baker, June 7th, 1886, he swearing the facts positively alleged to be true. The court granted the injunction against plaintiff, appointed Douglas Wilde receiver, and enjoined all the creditors from proceeding against the estate, but allowed Willmore to press his suit against the executrix to fix her personal liability. To prevent an adjudication as to waste, etc., before the special master, M. R. Stansell, Willmore amends his pleadings and strikes all of his original answer charging waste, etc. This amendment was allowed on November 4, 1886, by M. R. Stansell, special master, to whom the whole matter, with full power, had been referred by the court, and his amended answer was signed by J. A. Baker, attorney for Willmore.Touching the grounds complaining of the admission of evidence, the judge certified that, to avoid constant and repeated argument, he stated at the trial that he would not observe the usual rules of law as to the admissibility of evidence, but in making his finding would undertake to give effect only to legal evidence.W. I. Heyward, McCutchen & Shumate and Dabney & Fouché, for plaintiff in error.A. S. Johnson, T. W. Akin and A. W. Fite, contra.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.