112 Ga. 806 | Ga. | 1901
The bill of exceptions now before us recites that there came on to be tried in the court below “ the case of Gordon Webb et al. vs. H. W. Orr, the same being an action of ejectment.” It further recites that “when said case was called for trial,,
This court has uniformly held that a writ of error must be dismissed when but one person is named in the bill of exceptions as a plaintiff in error, and it affirmatively appears from the record that he was not affected by the judgment excepted to and therefore had no right to complain thereof. Central Railroad v. Craig, 59 Ga. 185; Healy v. Scofield, 60 Ga. 451; Southwestern Railroad v. Craig, 62 Ga. 361; Swift v. Thomas, 101 Ga. 89; Braswell v. Mortgage Co., 110 Ga. 30; W. U. Tel. Co. v. Griffith, supra. In Swift v. Thomas, a bill of exceptions was sued out in the name of “Mrs. M. A. Swift et al., caveators, plaintiffs in error,” and “a. motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, upon the ground that there was no party plaintiff in error named in the bill of exceptions, who was entitled to prosecute a writ of error from the judgment complained of.” The record disclosed that Mrs. Swift was not a party to the case tried in the superior court. “ In reply to the motion to dismiss the writ of error, a motion was made to amend it by the insertion of the names of certain of the caveators as parties plaintiff in error. An objection was made to the-allowance of this amendment, upon the ground that there was nothing to amend by.” This objection was sustained, the court, through Mr. Justice Atkinson, saying that “while it will be admitted-that new parties plaintiff in error may be added in this court by way of amendment, where there is a substantive party plaintiff in error, yet this right of amendment does not and can not be held to extend to the introduction of parties to a bill of exceptions where none existed in the first instance.” We see no reason why, on principle, a so-called bill of exceptions totally without a defendant in-
We do not, however, wish to be understood as holding that, were this otherwise, the writ of error should not be dismissed. Indeed, we rest our decision as to this phase of the case upon an altogether different ground. The testimony of the witnesses may or may not have been true. Certain it is that in certifying the bill of exceptions the trial judge did not remotely contemplate adopting or verifying their statements. Nor was there really any intention en the part of counsel for the plaintiff in error, when framing his bill of exceptions, to accept as true and vouch for any statement made by the witnesses who testified adversely to him and in behalf of his opponents. Counsel would surely have grievous cause for complaint were we to hold that, merely because a brief of the evidence
We went quite as far as we can reasonably be expected to go when, in the case of Joiner v. Singletary, 106 Ga. 257, we declined to dismiss the writ of error because it was possible to determine with certainty, from the recitals made in the bill of exceptions, which of the two persons therein designated as parties to the case in the trial court was really the plaintiff in error. We take this occasion to remark that full compliance with the requirements of good pleading can not fall short of an unequivocal designation by name of the person or persons suing out a bill of exceptions, and of the person or persons against whom redress is thereby sought. Unquestionably, the recitals in a bill of exceptions should in every instance be sufficiently clear and explicit to enable the officer into whose hands it may be placed for service to determine beyond peradventure precisely whom he is expected to serve. The bill of exceptions now before us by no means comes up to this reasonable standard of certainty. On the contrary; it casts a gloom over, rather than sheds light upon, the intention of the pleader with regard to the all-important matter just indicated. While we recognize it to be our duty, at all times, to “ dig deep” for truth and justice, when we have the opportunity so to do, the law surely does not contemplate that in our quest therefor we shall undertake to grope in absolute darkness such as that which now surrounds us.
Writ of error dismissed.