109 Ga. 547 | Ga. | 1900
A petition was filed by John McCain and numerous others therein named, against Mrs. H. M. Sutlive, R. D. Williams, and many other natural persons, and also the Southern Building & Loan Association. The plaintiffs alleged that they were tenants in common of-described realty with all the defendants except the one last named, and that it was a creditor of R. D. Williams, holding a mortgage upon his individual interest in the realty in question. The prayers were, (1) for the appointment of an auditor; (2) for an accounting as to rents and profits; (3) for a partition of the property by a sale and a division of its proceeds “between the parties according to their respective rights”; (4) for general relief; and (5) for process. Upon separate demurrers filed by the Building & Loan Association and the other defendants, the petition was dismissed. Thereupon a bill of exceptions alleging error in .sustaining the demurrers was sued out. It referred to the case .as that of “John McCain et al. v. Mrs. H. M. Sutlive, R. D. Williams et al.,” and did not otherwise name as a plaintiff in error any person except McCain, or as defendants in error any persons except Mrs. Sutlive, Williams, and the Building & Loan Association. Service of the bill of exceptions was acknowledged by Messrs. Foster & Butler ás attorneys for the corporation defendant in error, and by Messrs. W. A. Scott and J. D. Rambo as attorneys for the remaining defendants in error. There was no motion to dismiss the writ of error, and it was’
If there is to be a judgment of affirmance, it is, of course, immaterial to the plaintiff in error whether it is rendered upon the merits or as the legal consequence of dismissing his writ of error. There must be a dismissal when a judgment of reversal would be incapable of practical enforcement and therefore useless. Nothing of consequence would be accomplished by correcting errors when so doing would leave the party invoking the exercise of our jurisdiction in no better position than he was before. This court does not sit to render judgments which can have no practical bearing upon litigation. The rule which forbids its so doing finds a pointed application in the present instance. What could the trial court properly do, were we to reverse the judgment now under review and send the case back for another hearing? With our judgment favorable to one only of the numerous plaintiffs and adverse to three only of the many defendants below, and its judgment, still of force, adverse to all the remaining plaintiffs and favorable to all the remaining defendants, no course would be left open except to dismiss the case. An effort to try it on its merits would soon show the utter impracticability of arriving at a judgment which ■would be lawful and in all parts self-consistent. In this connection, mere suggestion, without elaboration, is sufficient. The truth is, the court below would be in no better condition for dealing with the case than if, as in this court, there was
Writ of error dismissed.