114 Ga. 975 | Ga. | 1902
At the October term, 1900, this court dismissed the writ of error in a case stated upon the docket as that of “ A. F. Ray v. P. P. Pease, adm’r, et al.” The bill of exceptions did not designate, eis nominibus, the parties thereto. It was obvious, however, that Mrs. Eay was the plaintiff in error in the case. The only indication given by the bill of exceptions as to who should be regarded as defendants in error was a recital therein that “the case of Emma C. Pease vs. A. F. Ray, claimant, and P. P. Pease, administrator of Emma C. Pease, vs. A. F. Ray, claimant, the two cases having been consolidated,” came on to be tried in the superior court of Eulton county. See 112 Ga. 676. The bill of exceptions in no way referred to Clifford L. Anderson as a party thereto. We
Section 5021 of the Civil Code reads as follows: “In all cases where a claim shall be interposed to property levied on by virtue of a fieri facias or attachment from any of the courts of this State, in favor of one or more persons, and pending such claim one of the plaintiffs shall die, the case shall proceed in the name of the survivor, and on the death of the last or only plaintiff, the executor or administrator of such deceased may, on motion, be made a party 4nstanter, and said case shall proceed without further delay.” That section provides for a case in which “the last or only plaintiff” in execution dies after levy and claim, and declares that in such event his legal representative may, on motion, be made a party to the claim case. Where the levy is made after the death of the plaintiff in execution, it would seem by analogy that the same procedure should be followed, namely, that the representative of the deceased plaintiff be made a party to the claim case. As intimated above, this might be accomplished merely by a tender of an issue by the representative and a proper response thereto by the claimant.
Counsel for defendant in error cite several decisions of this court. We will, however, notice only two of these. They are most nearly in point, and the others are not, in our opinion, sufficiently pertinent to the issue in question to require discussion. We do not think that the case of Rountree v. Lathrop, 69 Ga. 539, supports the contention of the defendant in error. That was a claim case in which a verdict was returned finding the property subject to the execu
Judgment reversed.