90 Ga. 404 | Ga. | 1892
A very condensed summary of the material facts, and of them alone, will first be given.
On the 30th of January, 1889, a permanent receiver was appointed for all the assets of the Mercantile Banking Company and of J. R. Tollesou and J. M. Richards, who were, respectively, president and cashier of that company. Said company, Tollesou and Richards were, at the same time and by the same order, enjoined from parting with any property or assets, except by tendering them over to the receiver. This order was made in a suit in the nature of a creditor’s bill, pending in Fulton superior court, brought against this company and its officers by the People’s Savings Bank and others. When the receiver' was appointed and the injunction granted, a part of the assets of the company consisted of a deposit made with the Messrs. James, as bankers, and evidenced originally by a certificate of deposit issued to the cashier of the Mercantile Banking Company, not, however, as cashier, but in his name as an individual. Previously to the appointment of the permanent receiver, this certificate had been surrendered, and another issued to one Lester. By this means the officers of the bank probably sought to conceal this part of the assets, and succeeded in doing so for a considerable time. The re
On the 14th of November, 1890, the Messrs. James, by an amendment to their answer, made known to the superior court that the action by Sams founded-on the
Error is assigned on the exceptions entered pendente lite, ánd on the final order sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the petition as to Sams. By the petition here referred to is understood the amended answer of the Messrs. James in so far as it prayed anything touching Sams, including his being made a party to the main case in the superior court.
1. On the foregoing facts, the question is, whether the Messrs. James had a right to make Sams a party defendant to the main suit which was pending in Fulton superior court, and compel him to litigate in that suit his claim to a portion of the deposit, and his alleged title to the certificate on which the action by him against them in the city court of Atlanta was based. If this right existed, the right to enjoin Sams from prosecuting the latter action would be an obvious legal consequence. No obstacle of mere procedure is in the way, for by the statutory system of pleading and procedure
2. The Messrs. James were entitled, as against Sams, to the injunction and order of interpleader prayed for. It was error to deny the same, and it was error to sustain his demurrer to their petition, as contained in their amended answer, and to dismiss that petition.
Judgment reversed.