Greenfield & Brown v. Vason

74 Ga. 126 | Ga. | 1884

Hall, Justice.

This was a suit at law brought to charge a trust estate in the hands of the defendant, as trustee, with the value of goods furnished by the plaintiffs, alleged to be necessary for the cultivation of the land belonging to the trust estate, and for the maintenance and support of the oestuis quo *127trust. The declaration stated that the defendant’s wife (naming her) and her children were the cestuis que trust, and also described the property of which the estate consisted, but it did not set forth the terms of the trust, so as to disclose to the court and jury what were its scope and purpose, or what, if any, restrictions were imposed upon the trustee’s power, nor did it state the value of the property held in trust, whether it yielded any income, or whether an encroachment upon the corpus would be necessary or proper; neither did the condition in life, the circumstances or wants of the eestuis que trust appear. For .these omissions, the declaration was demurrable. Gaudy vs. Babbitt et al., 56 Ga., 640.

But the court overruled the demurrer and sustained the declaration. The plaintiffs then endeavored to make out , their case by parol proof, in the absence of the instrument creating the trust. They took' no steps to bring that paper before the court. Among other evidence offered to sustain this suit were certain returns of the. trust property, made by the 'defendant to the tax receiver of Dougherty county, in the year when the account sued on was contracted. This evidence was objectecLto, and the objection being sustained, it was rejected. The defendants having moved a non-suit, the motion was sustained, and an entry to this effect was made on the judge’s docket, but before the judgment of non-suit was put in writing and placed upon the minutes, the. plaintiffs announced that they would voluntarily dismiss their suit, but were not permitted to do so. The court then passed an order awarding the non-suit, not only “ for the want of sufficient allegations in the pleading,” but also “ for the want of ■ sufficient evidence ” to sustain the suit.

From what has been h eretofore said, it is apparent that there was no proper or sufficient evidence to sustain this suit, and that the non-suit was properly awarded upon that ground. Had the terms of the trust appeared by proper , evidence, that is by the exhibition of the instrument creating it,or by properly accounting for its absence anda *128resort to secondary evidence as to its contents, — had these terms been set forth 'in the declarations, together with such other averments as have been shown to be indispensable, then the tax books may have been competent evidence. The court should have sustained the demurrer. While defective pleadings may authorize the dismissal of a suit, they afford no ground for a non-suit. H id the demurrer been sustained, the plaintiffs by amendment could have remedied the defects in their pleading, and the court should not have awarded anon-suit because of these defects, after overruling the demurrer, without at least giving notice of his change of opinion upon this subject. This error, howevér, in view of what subsequently occurred, did notinjure the plaintiffs.

Had the declaration been amended, so as to conform in all respects to the requirements of law, still the testimohy fell short of sustaining the case, and necessitated the non-suit. The plaintiffs did not question the propriety of the non-suit upon this ground; they voluntarily offered to dismiss it. They preferred this course, because they were apprehensive if they suffered a non-suit upon the motion of their adversaries, they would be precluded from renewing their suit.

In 56 Ga., 185, this court broadly held that where a suit was dismissed upon defendant’s motion, on the ground that the allegations in the petition did not make a case upon which plaintiffs could recover, this was a judgment of the court upon demurrer to the declaration, and operated as a complete bar to a second suit for the same cause of action, and might be pleaded as “ res adjudieata ” thereto.

It is said that this decision has been questioned, if not seriously modified, by subsequent adjudications, of the court, and that it does not distinguish with sufficient care between pleadings perfect in themselves and such as are defective for want of form and specific allegations. How far this is true, if true at all, it is needless to inquire. It is a decision concurred in by three judges, and cannot be *129reversed, or materially changed, except by a full bench, after argument had, in which the decision, by permission of the court, has been expressly questioned and reviewed, and we are not aware that this decision has ever been re- ' versed or changed according to these requirements. Code, §217. Until this is done, it is as binding and obligatory upon all the courts as would be an act of the general assembly.

To force these plaintiffs to take this risk, which they sought to avoid, would, it seems to us, under the circumstances of this case, have been to apply an extremely rigorous rule. The entry of non-suit on the bench docket was a mere memorandum, and did not embody the final action of the court. It is not like refusing to allow the dismissal of a case, after the publication of the verdict of ' a jury in court, or after the plaintiff has information that it is against him. 55 Ga., 20. It more closely resembles the case of Smith vs. Hornsby, 70 Ga., 552, 556,than any other to which our attention hás been called, in which it is said the defendants had a right to withdraw their demurrer before the court had pronounced and entered his final decree thereon; an intimation or declaration of the judge that he would overrule the demurrer would not debar the right of withdrawal. Code, §3447 and citations. To adopt this practice will not imperil rights that seem. to be well founded. The contrary rule, if not a violation.. of the letter of the above cited section of the Code, is at least contrary to its liberal and beneficent spirit. Eor refusing to grant permission to the plaintiffs to dismiss their • suit, the j udgment of non-suit awarded must be vacated» and set aside.

Judgment reversed.

■ Jackson, Chief Justice, said that in the case in 56 Ga.\ 185, the question determined on the demurrer was, whether" any case was made, not the mere existence of defects in., the pleadings. ’
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