20 Ga. 1 | Ga. | 1856
By the. Court.
delivering tbe opinion.
Tbe suit was against the firm of Collier, Jelks & Co. It is alleged that the defendants, by the firm name, made the promissory note sued on, and that Edward St. George "was one of the said firm. Defendant, St. George, at the return term of the case, appeared and pleaded that “ he did not make the said note in the said suit described, and that he did not authorize any other person to make said note.”
The error assigned on the ruling of the Court, ordering the •name of James 0. Jelks to be stricken from the case, was ■abandoned.
During the pendency of this suit, the plaintiffs, on their own application, were dismissed from the administration on Johnson’s estate; but afterwards, discovering that they had not fully administered the estate, they moved the Ordinary for a rescission of the order of dismission. The Ordinary rescinded the first order and re-instated the plaintiffs in the administration. The defendant’s Counsel, in support of the plea that plaintiffs were not administrators, gave in evidence the order of the Ordinary dismissing them from the administration. The plaintiffs then tendered in evidence the latter order, revoking the former, and which re-instated the plaintiffs in the administration. It was objected to by defendant’s Counsel, but admitted by the Court. This decision is assigned for error, and it is insisted that the Ordinary had no jurisdiction to pass this order of revocation; that before the estate would be again represented, there ought to have been a new publication, and that an administration de bonis ■non should have been granted. We are not prepared to go the length contended for by defendant’s Counsel. But it is not necessary to decide that point in this case. Edward St. George died, and his death had been suggested of record before the last order of the Ordinary, which was passed at the May Term of the Court of Ordinary, 1854, of Houston County. A scire facias was sued out and served ■on George W. Collier, administrator of St. George, calling on him to make known why he should not be made a party defendant in lieu of his intestate. Not showing any causo, he was made a party defendant at October Term, 1854. Eive months before he was made a party, the plaintiffs had been re.-instated in the administration of Johnson’s estate, by the Ordinary of Houston County; and it does not appear, from the record, that he objected, at the time he was made a party, to the competency of the plaintiffs to maintain the suit in Court. It is now insisted that the Ordinary had no jurisdiction to pass the order which annulled the
If mere irregularity renders a judgment void, then a proceeding to set it aside is unnecessary. But such is not the ■case. If it were, however, then the record shows that the order of dismission is by no means regular. The petition ■ states that the administrators had advertised, in terms of the .law, for letters of dismission. The order dismissing them .states that they had advertised in terms of the law.
The Act of the General Assembly requires that the administrator who seeks to bo discharged from his administration, ,should petition the Ordinary for a discharge. He must have fully discharged the duties assigned him” at the time he ■files his petition; and his accounts wifh the Ordinary should ■show the fact, so far as the assets with which he is charged in the inventory and his returns are concerned. The Ordinary shall then order a citation to be issued; and this citation should be published for six months. The order for the •citation and publication, are or should be the acts of the Ordinary. It does not appear that a citation was either ordered or published in this case.
The Ordinary ought to bo well satisfied, from “ an examination into the intestate’s estates and affairs, that the administrator has faithfully and honestly discharged the trust and •confidence reposed in him,” before he grants the discharge.
Hence, it appears that if the order vacating the order of ■dismission is void for irregularity, the order of dismission is,
The errors assigned on the charge of the Court, are abandoned.
Let the judgment of the Court below be affirmed.