88 Ga. 78 | Ga. | 1891
While the act of 1887 (Acts 1887, p. 64) declares that a petition which seeks an extraordinary equitable relief or remedy must be verified, and while we think it is the better practice for a judge to require petitions seeking extraordinary equitable relief or remedies to be positively verified before he grants any order thereon, still, if the petition should be imperfectly verified, the deficiency may be supplied at the hearing by a new affidavit to the petition or by the affidavits of other persons, if in the exercise of his discretion he should think proper to proceed on the defective verification. If the judge should refuse to proceed on account of the insufficiency of the verification, we would not hold the ruling to be erroneous. Boykin v. Epstein, 87 Ga. 26, 13 S. E. Rep. 15. If, however, the judge sees proper, in the exercise of his discretion, to allow the petition to be properly verified, either by a new affidavit of the plaintiff, or by affidavits of others who know the facts, we will not control his discretion in so doing. Shannon v. Fechheimer, 76 Ga. 86; Alspaugh v. Adams, 80 Ga. 345.
Judgment affirmed as to injunction and receiver, hut reversed as to the attachment for contempt.