107 Ga. 220 | Ga. | 1899
The assignments of error shown by the record' present a number of legal questions of both interest and importance. • In the court below, the plaintiffs made several exceptions pendente lite, on which error was assigned. The trial having resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs, the defendant assigned as error the overruling of its motion for a new trial, by which it presents many exceptions to the rulings and charge of the trial judge, which, if well taken, will work a reversal of' the judgment overruling the motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, as a matter of law. The plaintiffs brought their petition to recover of the defendant the value of' certain cotton which the plaintiffs allege they had delivered to the defendant in the city of Savannah, to be transported by way7 of New York to Naples. In one count of the petition it was alleged that the defendant, having received the cotton for •transportation, converted it to its own use. In a second, it is-alleged that the defendant did not safely carry the cotton to-Naples, but so carelessly and negligently conducted itself in such carriage that the cotton was lost to the plaintiffs. The answer denied each allegation set out in the petition. One of' the main defenses to the action was, that at the time of the shipment of the cotton the property and assets .of the defendant corporation were in the hands of receivers appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction, and that such receivers were operating the steamships of the company, and if any conversion of' the cotton was made, it was by the receivers, not by the de
There was no error in the admission of this evidence. This court, in the case of Kerchner v. Frazier, 106 Ga. 437, ruled that a decree in chancery, when offered to prove collaterally that such decree was made, is admissible, although not accompanied with the record in the case; but when offered as an adjudication on the s.ubject-matter, it is only admissible when accompanied with a complete and duly authenticated copy of the proceeding in which it was rendered. There is, however, a wide difference between a decree in chancery and an order appointing a receiver in a pending case. A decree, being a final adjudication, fixes the rights of the parties, and the reason for excluding the decree when offered as an adjudication, unaccompanied with the pleadings upon which the decree was founded, is, that without such proof it may be impossible either to understand the decree itself, or to ascertain with certainty what disputed questions it decided. 3 Taylor, Ev. § 1574 a. The order appointing the receiver is an interlocutory order made in the discretion of the court, fixing no rights, but intended to preserve the property and estate of the corporation until a final hearing can be had, when a decree fixing the rights of the parties in the property will be rendered. It is but a method of taking such property into the possession of the court. In Beach on Receivers, 751, the author, citing 12 La. Ann. 298, says, “A certified copy of the order of appointment is considered prima facie proof that the proper parties were before the court when the appointment was made, but the defendant is at liberty to rebut this presumption.” In the Law of Receivers of Corporations, by Gluck & Becker, page 6, it is said that “The usual method of proving the appointment of a receiver is to produce a duly authenticated copy of the order appointing the receiver, and to establish the fact of the giving of a bond in conformity thereto.” The case of Potter v. Merchants Bank of Albany, 28
Finally, on the question as to the liability of the company, Gen. Sorrel testified that he was the manager for the receivers on the 9th of July, 1895, the date of the issue of the bill of lad
From the view we entertain of the evidence, the defendant •company was in no way bound to respond to the plaintiffs for the damages they sustained by the wrongful acts (if such'there be) of the receivers. The receiver is not the agent or representative of either party to an action, but is uniformly regarded as an officer of the court, exercising his functions in the interest of neither plaintiff nor defendant, but for the common benefit of all parties in interest. High on Receivers, § 1, citing a number of cases in note 2. Being an officer of the court, the property intrusted to his care is in custodia legis, for the benefit of whoever may have finally established title thereto, the court itself having the care of the property by its receiver. 17 How. 322. He is not the representative of the party or parties, but the representative of the court. Through and by 'him the court itself acts, exercising its authority for the corporation, its creditors, and its stockholders. Gluck & Becker, § 1. There are cases in which he has been held officially liable for torts, but none, of which we are informed, where the corporation whose property has been placed in his hands has been held directly responsible in damages for his wrong-doing. The principle is sound that one who hold the proceeds arising from a tortious act of another, by which the property of a third person has been damaged, is liable to pay over such sum in his hands. We are cited by counsel for defendants in error to an adjudicated case where there was a corrupt and collusive agreement, participated in by the corporation under which the re
Judgment reversed.