An execution issued in favor of the plaintiffs in •error on a judgment rendered May 6, 1884, against J. J. Frazier and Hines, and on the 30th day of May, 1885, was levied •upon lot number forty-six, and thirty-three acres in the southwest corner of lot 144 in the 19th district of Dodge county, as the property of J. J. Frazier. A claim was interposed by W. H. Frazier & Brother. At the trial, plaintiffs in execution made out a prima facie case by the introduction of the execution and evidence that the defendant in fi. fa. was in possession
We have no difficulty in disposing of any of the questions so raised, except the last, that is, that the verdict and decree were admitted in evidence without being accompanied with the record in the case. The deed to the claimant, made by J. J.
To the same effect are the decisions of our own court. In the case of Mitchell v. Mitchell, 40 Ga. 11, this court ruled that a copy of the verdict in an equity cause, unaccompanied by the bill and answer and other parts of the; record, is not evidence. In the case of Gibson v. Robinson, 90 Ga. 756, Justice Lumpkin, delivering the opinion of the court, clearly expresses the rule on this subject in the following language: “It is well recognized as a general rule, that where a judgment is relied on as an estoppel, or as establishing any particular state of facts of which it was the* judicial result, it can be proved only by offering in evidence a complete and duly authenticated copy of the entire proceedings in which the same was rendered. But where the only direct object to be subserved is to show the existence and contents of such judgment, this rule does not apply, and a certified copy of the judgment entry of a court of record possessing general original jurisdiction is admissible, by itself, to prove rendition and contents.” It is 'true that in this last case the court ruled that the judgment without the record was admissible; • and that ruling was right, as it was offered and admitted only to show the rendition and contents of the judgment. Under these rules, it would seem that the decree was not admissible of itself. It was offered to show that the superior court of Pulaski county, exercising chancery jurisdiction, with proper parties before it, decreed the reformation of a deed, the effect of which was to vest in the claimants title to property which was not in terms conveyed by the deed. The object of the claimants was to avail themselves of this decree
Judgment reversed.