117 Ga. 786 | Ga. | 1903
This is a claim case in which the title to the land is not so much involved as the ownership of a fi. fa. issued on a judgment in favor of “E. J. Dozier, executor of Mary Gibson,” against •Wilson & Company. On account of the bankruptcy of the defendants in fi. fa. and a homestead over all the land involved, the levy was long delayed; and believing that the judgment was barred, McWhorter bought the property. When the levy was made he filed a claim, insisting, among other things, that the judgment was dormant. But this court having held, in Dozier v. McWhorter, 113 Ga. 584, that the statute was suspended, and that the lien of the execution could be asserted, McWhorter paid $2,500 for a relinquishment of the lien by the legatees of Mary Gibson, whom he supposed to be the beneficial owners of the execution. John A. Dozier, temporary administrator of E. J. Dozier, continued to prosecute the levy, and Columbus Heard, Esq., who had obtained the judgment on which the fi. fa. issued, also asserted his lien for attorney’s fees. The usual brief, statutory pleading in a claim case was, by amendments covering a hundred pages of the record, converted into a bill in equity, raising questions as to whether E. J. Dozier at the time of his death was still indebted to the estate, whether the fi. fa. or its proceeds belonged to the estate of Mary Gibson, and whether John A. Dozier, as an heir of E. J. Dozier, was not estopped from claiming the fi. fa. as temporary administrator, because he had participated in the relinquishment of the lien thereof on McWhorter’s land. Many orders, making and striking parties and allowing amendments, were made; but the case was finally submitted to the jury on questions framed by the court, requiring them to answer to whom the fi. fa. belonged, and what was due Judge Heard as his fee. The verdict was in favor of the claimant,
Prima facie the judgment and execution in favor of “E. J. Dozier, executor of Mary Gibson,” was his individual property. Marshall v. Charland, 109 Ga. 308; Wynn v. Irvine, 109 Ga. 288; Kenan v. DuBignon, 46 Ga. 261; Civil Code, §2998. This principle is so well established as to have become a rule of property, and must be followed, even though it is “ arbitrary ” and the reasons assigned are not “ satisfactory.” Daniels. Hollingshead, 16 Ga. 190. Truth
This, therefore, brings us to the consideration of the controlling point in the case, and the one mainly insisted on here as ground for the grant of a new trial. Error is assigned because the court refused to permit the defendant to prove by Thomas B. Dozier that after his father had made the deed to 1,700 acres of land, he heard him say a great many times that the fi. fa. was his individual property ; that he beard him say this just two days before his death, and thought W. W. Dozier was present. Movants also offered to prove by John A. Dozier that he had heard his father talk about the fi. fa. several times, and he always said that the fi. fa. was his ; and further offered to prove by Columbus Heard that in a conversation in 1896, about fees, E. J. Dozier told him that the fi. fa. belonged to himself, and not to the estate of Mary Gibson; that he had settled with said estate in full. The evidence of these several witnesses was excluded on the ground that it was hearsay, and, as declarations by E. J. Dozier in his own favor as to ownership, was not admissible. Self-serving declarations are not admissible unless made in the presence of the opposite party, or as part of the res gestae, and for the reason that a party can not thus make evidence in his own favor. Admissions against his interest may be shown, on the theory that the opponent may fairly treat as true what the other party says against his personal or property rights.
And the same distinction seems to have been recognized'by this court. Declarations by one out of possession are not admissible. Parrott v. Baker, 82 Ga. 364. Declarations are admissible only to characterize the possession otherwise proved. Walker v. Hughes, 90 Ga. 52. And possession itself can not be proved by a declaration of the defendant that he was in possession, and had conducted farming operations on the land, there being no other evidence to show that he had any possession at the time of making the declaration. Jaffray v. Brown, 91 Ga. 57. Nor are they “admissible to show title.” Ozmore v. Hood, 53 Ga. 118. Most of the cases in our books relate to the adverse possession of land. Smith v. Haire, 58 Ga. 446, strongly relied on by the plaintiff in error, was such a case; for while there title to cotton was in controversy, the ownership depended upon the ownership of the land as to
It is not necessary to consider in detail each of the twenty-three grounds of the motion for new trial. The excluded testimony is not set out in numbers 13, 18, 9, except by reference to the brief of
Judgment on the main bill affirmed; cross-bill dismissed.