172 Ga. 322 | Ga. | 1931
,J. W. Woolf oik executed his note to J. R. Kinney for $3,000, and to secure it he executed to the payee his deed to a described house and lot. Woolfolk thereafter sold and conveyed this house and lot to E. L. Butler, the latter assuming and agree
1. The general rule is that all parties in favor of whom a judgment or decree has been rendered, or who are interested in having such judgment or decree sustained, or whose interest will necessarily be affected by a reversal or modification of such judgment or decree, must be made plaintiffs in error, or defendants in error; and for lack of such persons as parties the writ of error will be dismissed. Inman v. Estes, 104 Ga. 645 (30 S. E. 800); U. S. Leather Co. v. First National Bank, 107 Ga. 263 (33 S.
2. While it is true that “Where, in a suit against two or more co-defendants, the verdict and judgment are adverse to the defendants, and one of them makes a motion for a new trial, which is overruled, the movant can except to the judgment overruling his motion, and bring the case to the Supreme Court without making any of the other defendants parties to the bill of exceptions; and the failure to do so will not work a dismissal of the writ of error” (Turner v. Newell, 129 Ga. 89, 58 S. E. 657; Durrence v. Cowart, 160 Ga. 671, 129 S. E. 26), yet where a judgment was rendered against both the defendant and intervenor, under circumstances narrated above, and a special lien was set up and established upon the real estate to which intervenor held title subject to the payment of the secured debt, the original defendant in the suit was interested in having the verdict and judgment sustained, as the effect of the judgment setting up a special lien upon the realty would have the effect of relieving the defendant from the payment of the secured debt, certainly to the extent of the value of the realty; and having this adverse interest to the intervenor in sustaining the judgment, and having been made a party to the motion for a new trial, he should have been made a party defendant to the bill of exceptions. The mere fact that the defendant might be relieved of the payment of the debt if the intervenor succeeded, and might likewise have an interest in the success of the intervenor, would not relieve the intervenor from making him a party defendant to the bill of exceptions. If the defendant might be deemed interested both ways, that is, with both the plaintiff and intervenor, this would not relieve the intervenor of the necessity of making him a party defendant to the bill of exceptions, especially when he had been made by the intervenor a party defendant to the motion for new trial. The defendant not having been served with the bill of exceptions, and not having acknowledged nor waived service thereof, the bill of exceptions is dismissed.
Writ of error dismissed.
The defendants in error, in support of the motion to dismiss, rely upon the ruling in the case of Inman v. Estes, 104 Ga. 645 (supra), and other similar rulings. In that case this court said: “Persons who as parties to a motion for new trial are interested in sustaining the judgment complained of therein are essential parties to a bill of exceptions assigning error upon the overruling of such motion; and if such parties are not duly served, the writ of error will be dismissed.” This ruling was repeated in Hodnett v. Douglas, 124 Ga. 994 (supra). It will be noted that the rule applies only to persons who are parlies to a motion for a new trial, or are interested in sustaining the original judgment of the lower court. It appears from the record in the present case that Woolf oik did not move for a new trial, and it certainly does not appear that he is interested in sustaining the verdict against himself in behalf of the executors which was directed by the court. Before a motion to dismiss a bill of exceptions (which is a drastic proceeding) will be sustained, both ingredients of the rule which we have quoted must concur. In the original motion for a new trial, after stating that there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, it is alleged: “The -, being dissatisfied with the verdict and judgment, . . moves the court for a new trial” (upon the usual general grounds). Both counsel and the court seem to have dealt with this apparent uncertainty as to who was moving for a new trial. In the only order granted by the court upon this motion it was construed by the court (as it was evidently intended) as a motion made only in behalf of Butler. And so in providing for the future proceedings upon the motion, the court in its order says: “ The intervenor having made a motion for a new trial in said case on the grounds stated,” etc. So that it is very plain from the record that Woolfolk’s acknowledgment of service was a useless proceeding, since Woolfolk is not named as movant and he did not join in the motion for a new trial, personally or by counsel.
In Inman v. Estes, supra, Waxelbaum & Company and others who had filed an equitable petition, as well as Inman, Smith & Company, were made parties plaintiff, by the consolidation of WaxelbaunTs petition. The verdict was for the defendant; and the rule stated by the court was a proper one, because these latter parties Were as much interested as plaintiffs as Inman, Smith & Company.
The well-settled rule enunciated in the decisions above referred to has no application whatever in a case such as the present, where there is a verdict for the plaintiff, and one or more defendants move for a new trial, and upon a judgment overruling the motion bring exceptions to this court. In such a case one defendant alone though there be many, may make a motion for a new trial alone, and may except to the judgment overruling it by writ of error without being joined by any of his codefendants; or, should
In Merchants & Traders Bank of Rome v. Harrison, 68 Ga. 463 (2) the court held that codefendants need not be served with a bill of exceptions, saying: “Where some of the defendants to a bill in equity excepted to the overriding of a demurrer to the bill, they need not serve their codefendants with the bill of exceptions.” Judge Speer, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “A motion was made to dismiss this writ of error on three grounds, first, that the defendants were not served. They need not be served because other defendants have brought this cause, and they need only to serve the complainants, especially when they demur to the bill for want of equity.” After dealing with the other two grounds of the motion to dismiss (which are not applicable to this case), the court said, “We therefore overrule the motion to dismiss this writ of error as to the question we now shall and can only review,”
In Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Griffith, 111 Ga. 551 (36 S. E. 859), Mr. Justice Eish dealt at some length' with the logical reasons upon which is based the general rule which does not require a defendant who complains of an adverse judgment to join in the bill of exceptions his codefendants who may not desire to except, reaffirmed the decision in Jones v. Hurst, supra, and said: “Certainly it was not incumbent upon the telegraph company, if it desired to bring here for review the judgment overruling its separate demurrer, to make the railway company a party defendant to the bill of exceptions.” Since the telegraph company was a defendant in the case then being considered, although the bill of exceptions had been amended “from the record in the case” by inserting the Augusta Eailway & Electric Company as a coplaintiff, it was still contended by counsel for Mrs. Griffith, defendant in error, that a new trial could not be legally granted as to one only of the joint defendants below, and was accordingly argued that as
There is a vast difference between the necessity for having all proper parties plaintiff in the original action as plaintiffs in error, where the finding of the lower court was in favor of the defendants, from the rule applicable where there is a finding in the lower court in favor of the plaintiff. The distinction between the two, as recognized by this court in the allowing of amendments to bills of exceptions by the insertion of additional plaintiffs in error, is pointed out in Western Union Telegraph Co. v. Griffith, supra, in the long list of authorities cited by Mr. Justice Fish, who calls attention to the fact that since the “saving act” of 1880 (Acts 1880-1881, p. 123), which, among other things, provided for curing by amendment “any imperfection or omission of necessary and proper allegations” in the bill of exceptions which can be “corrected from the record in the case,” provided the record shows “clearly who were the respective parties to the litigation in the court below, and the bill of exceptions shows that all who were interested in the case, as presented in the Supreme Court, in sustaining the judgment of the court below, had been served,” has been construed consistently, in the long list of decisions cited in the Telegraph case, supra, to refer to proper parties plaintiff. “But in none of these
In Durrence v. Cowart, 160 Ga. 671 (supra), the unanimous court, as constituted at present, reaffirmed the ruling of Turner v. Newell, supra. Among numerous decisions of the Court of Appeals to the same effect are Kerr v. Holder, 13 Ga. App. 9 (78 S. E. 682); Pharr v. Eve, 17 Ga. App. 686 (87 S. E. 1098); Luke v. McSwain, 27 Ga. App. 141 (107 S. E. 566); Mackle Construction Co. v. Hart & Crouse Co., 27 Ga. App. 405 (108 S. E. 818); Evans v. Williams, 29 Ga. App. 126 (113 S. E. 703); Augusta Motor Sales Co. v. King, 33 Ga. App. 433 (126 S. E. 866).
Counsel for defendants in error recognize the rule that “ where in a suit against two or more defendants the verdict and judgment are adverse to the defendants, and one of them makes a motion for new trial which is overruled, the movant can except to the judgment overruling the motion and bring the case to the Supreme Court without making any of the other defendants a party to the bill of exceptions,” but argues that this rule does not “cut into the doctrine of the other well-known rule, which is that all parties to a motion for a new trial, when the ruling on the motion for a new trial forms the only exception, should be made parties to a bill of exceptions whose only purpose is to set aside the judgment denying or overruling the motion for new trial.” As Woolf oik did not make a motion for a new trial, the rule as stated by counsel is not applicable. Even if Woolf oik had made a motion for a new trial, in the language of Chief Justice Jackson in Ruffin v. Paris, supra, he might have been content with the judgment overruling his