14 Ga. 665 | Ga. | 1854
delivering the opinion.
An action of ejectment was brought in the Superior Court of Muscogee county, by the heirs of Martin Brooks, against John Quin, John Padget and Isaac Williams, to recover Lots Nos. 72 and 76, in the City of Columbus. The defendants were the tenants of Daniel McDougald, deceased. Mrs. Ann E. Mc-Douga'ld, as the administratrix of her husband, Daniel Mc-Dougald, filed her bill, representing, amongst other things, that her intestate, in his life-time, to-wit: on the 20th of April, 1840, executed a deed to the lots in dispute, to Martin Brooks, the ancester of the plaintiffs, to enable Brooks to claim these lots for McDougald, during his temporary absence from the State, provided any attempt should be made to disturb the property. And she charges, that the conveyance was intended merely to operate as a power of attorney, for this purpose, and for none other, whatever. That while it was true, that the Legislature, at ifs previous session, in December, 1839, had passed an Act authorizing a claim to land to be interposed by an agent or attorney at law, or in fact, for their principal; yet this Statute was not known to her intestate at the time — it not having been published and circulated at the time the( conveyance was made to Martin Brooks. A copy of the ■ deed made by McDougald to Brooks, was annexed to the bill, by which it appeared that it had been proven and admitted to record, upon the oath of Alexander McDougald, one of the subscribing witnesses, on the 3d of October, 1840.
The bill prayed that the deed might be cancelled, and the action of ejeótment perpetually enjoined.
The answers of the defendants were filed, at the November Term, 1852, denying all knowledge of any of the facts charged in the bill, and which would, if true, impugn the validity of their title. They admitted that they had never seen the original deed, but relied on a copy taken from the record book.
The complainant, by her solicitor, moved the Court to make an amendment to the bill, the main feature and object of which
The amendment contained other matter, which I deem it unnecessary to notice.
The defendants’ solicitor moved to strike out this amendment, on the grounds:
Mrst. That it was contradictory to the original bill.
Secondly. That it was allowed without any special cause having been previously shown to the Court; and
Thirdly. Because it had been improvidently granted.
The Court sustained the motion on the first ground, but overruled the other two.
Upon the representation of the defendants’ solicitor, that he was unable to compare the original with the amended bill; and that it would be more consistent with equity practice to reject the amendment altogether, and compel the complainant’s solicitor to present it in an unexceptionable form. The Court adopted this suggestion, and rejected the amendment in toto.
Thank God that the night of pedantry and quibble is passing away, and the morning of reason and common sense is breaking brightly upon the world ! The men of 1799 disdained to invoke the spirits of departed oracles, in search for rules for our Courts of Justice. But a middle age intervened, and in spite of our Act of 1818, and other Statutes of amendments, we have been bandied “ from Coke to Cooke — from Year Books to Dome Books — from ignotum to ignotius”, until we had become the most law-ridden people upon the face of the earth. Modern law reform is sweeping away all of these miserable cobwebs of antiquated nonesense, and life, liberty, reputation and property are appreciated too highly to allow them to rest on “legal riddles and paradoxes”. Forms are no longer anything — substance is everything.
Let us examine the other objection to the amendment, notwithstanding it is doubtful, I think, whether it was ever intended to be sustained by the Court. And that is, whether it is necessary to make a preliminary showing to the Court, upon oath, before leave can be had to amend a sworn bill. Concede the practice to be as here contended for, and apply the rule in its most rigid form, as to be found in the case in 1 Edwards, already referred to, and also in Rogers vs. Rogers, (1
The answers disclosing the necessity for the amendment, were filed at the November Term, 1852. The amendment was offered at the same term. The amendment was allowed to lie-filed, reserving, it is true, the benefit of exception to defendants’ solicitor. But in the amendment which is sworn to, the-reasons are distinctly set forth, which made the filing of it necessary, and the excuse is rendered, why tbo now' matter was not incorporated in the original bill.
It is admitted that the estate of Martin Brooks is insolvent, and that it is unrepresented. Why aiiy portion of the debt due Daniel McDougaid, other than for the purchase-money of the land, should be paid by his Loirs'at law, of .Brooks, in preference to other outstanding debts of equal or higher dignity, wo cannot very clearly see. -We express no. decided opinion upon this subject, however, at this stage of the case.
Judgment reversed,