14 Ga. 539 | Ga. | 1854
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
As to suits by infants, this seems to, have been the state of the Law of England, at the time Avhen .that Law Avas introduced into Georgia.
Process might be sued out by the infant alone, but the declaration could not regularly be filed before a next friend to the infant had been appointed by the Court, for prosecuting the infant’s suit. If the declaration Avas filed before such a next friend had been appointed, the defendant might, at his option, refuse to plead, or he might go on with his defence. If ho chose to go on, and did go on until a verdict had passed against him, he lost all right to object to the non-existence of a next friend in the suit. That after, verdict had become a matter which was cured by the Statutes of jeofails.
If not choosing to go on, the defendant refused to plead to the declaration, or after pleading, refused to take any other of the steps to be taken by defendants before verdict, the Court Avould not compel him to advance; but neither would it dismiss the infant’s suit. It would merely, at that stage of the case, appoint a next friend to the infant; and having appointed one, it would consider the case as standing in the condition in Avhich it would have stood, had a next friend been regularly appointed at the first moment, at which one might properly have been appointed. - 1
The suit, although attended by a next friend, Avas the suit of the infant’s. The next friend Avas merely an officer of the Court, appointed by the Court to look after'the interests of the infant. He Avas not a party to the suit. (Macpherson on Inf. 352. 1 Tidd Pr. 99. 2 Saund. Rep. 117, f note (i.)— Flight vs. Bodand, 4 Russ. R. 298. Sinclair vs. Sinclair, 18 Mees. & W. 640.
p.] The father of the infant is not the only person that is eligible to the place of next friend. Any other may be appointed by the Coui’t, in its discretion. And when the father can be a witness for the infant, or when he neglects the interests of the infant, if another is appointed, it is clone in the exercise of a wise discretion. (1 Tidd Pr. 99, 100. 1 Danl. Ch. Pr. 94, 95.)
There does not appear to be any material difference between a next friend and a guardian, ad litem. (1 Tidd, 99, 100.— Macpherson on Inf. 352, 353.)
No error is apparent in the record in this case; and therefore, the decisions of the Court below ought to be affirmed.