142 Ga. 592 | Ga. | 1914
Section 328 differs materially from section 329 of the Penal Code, which also comes from the act of 1833, supra, and declares: “If any person, informing or prosecuting under the pretense of any penal law, shall compound with the offender, or direct the suit or information to be discontinued, unless it be by leave of the court where the-same is pending, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The ruling above announced does not conflict with the decision in either Chandler v. Johnson, 39 Ga. 85, 89, or Rhodes V. Neal, 64 Ga. 704, 706 (37 Am. R. 93). In the former case the makers of a promissory note, when sued for the amount thereof, defended on the ground that the contract was void because it was given to suppress the threatened prosecution of a felony charged to have been committed in this State. In the latter case the suit was to recover a stated amount alleged to be due for services rendered in securing the consent of the prosecutor to the dismissal of certain criminal prosecutions in the State of Tennessee, wherein the defendant was charged with felony. In both eases the validity of the contract sued on was the question for decision. It was held, in effect, that con