142 Ga. 297 | Ga. | 1914
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
We do not think that the pleaded facts constitute an estoppel. The judgment obtained by Gano in 1899 against W. H. Harris, executor of H. C. Harris, was a personal judgment, and the words following his name are mere matter of description. The amendment to that judgment was illegal and void, for the reason that the original judgment was rendered by the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court could not render a judgment against an executor on a note for money borrowed since the death of his testator, without the introduction of evidence. Harris v. Woodard, 133 Ga. 104 (65 S. E. 250). It is insisted, inasmuch as the plaintiff was pressing his judgment against the estate of H. C. Harris, and not against W. H. Harris, and has received thereon from the estate of H. C. Harris certain sums of money, that his conduct