165 Ga. 252 | Ga. | 1927
1. The motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions is without merit.
2. The judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction may be set aside by a decree, for fraud, accident, or mistake, or the acts of the adverse party unmixed with the negligence or fault of the petitioner. Civil Code (1910), §§ 4584, 4585, 5965.
3. Actual fraud consists in any kind of artifice by which another is deceived. Constructive fraud consists in any act of omission or commission, contrary to legal or equitable duty, trust, or confidence justly reposed, which is contrary to good conscience, and operates to the injury of another. § 4622. Fraud may be consummated by signs, or tricks, or by any other unfair way used to cheat another. § 4625.
4. The petition alleges these facts: B., an attorney at law, was employed and paid by their father to prepare and file a claim for his children and grandchildren to lands which had been levied upon as his property. This was done. Before the claim came on for trial, B.
(a) If the statements alleged in the petition to have been made by the attorney of the plaintiff to G., who represented B., were true (and the demurrer admits them to be true), they were sufficient to lull G. into
(6) In the circumstances these statements to G. would have the same effect as if made to B. or the claimants.
(c) There is nothing to show that the claimants or their attorney, or the latter’s representative, were guilty of such negligence as would bar the claimants from filing a petition to set aside the verdict and judgment because of such fraud. Bigham v. Kistler, supra.
5. The proper practice in a claim case, where the claimant fails to put in an appearance, would be either to dismiss the claim, or to permit the plaintiff to make out his case, when he would be entitled to a verdict subjecting the property. National Furniture Co. v. Edwards, 105 Ga. 240 (31 S. E. 161) ; Bank of Southwestern Georgia v. Empire Life Insurance Co., 10 Ga. App. 320 (73 S. E. 597).
6. The petition contains no allegation or prayer which entitles thenplaintiffs to partition of the lands in dispute, or which would entitle them to set aside the verdict and judgment upon the ground that they were recovered by mistake.
'7. Under the rulings embraced in headnoles 2, 3, and 4, the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the petition.
Judgment reversed.