This is another branch of the same litigation as that reported in Scarborough v. Edgar, 176 Ga. 574 (
The facts involved in the instant case can not be distinguished from those in Smith v. Scarborough, 182 Ga. 157 (supra). The two cases involve the same will, the same order of the court of ordinary, and the same attack upon the alleged title of the purchaser at the' administrators’ sale, though the property itself is different, and the defendants in the trial court, defendants in error here, are not the same as in the case cited. The one controlling issue in the two cases is the same. Plaintiffs and defendants alike claim through J. W. Williams. If the title of Williams was divested by the sale of his administrators, the purchaser at the ad
The court of ordinary in the matter of administering estates is a court of general jurisdiction; and therefore its judgments can not be collaterally attacked, unless the record negatives the existence of the necessary jurisdictional facts. Bryan v. Walton, 14 Ga. 185 (11); Tant v. Wigfall, and Maybin v. Knighton, supra; Medlin v. Downing Lumber Co., 128 Ga. 115 (
The plaintiffs in error invoke the doctrine of lis pendens, and insist that the purchaser at the administrators’ sale took with notice of the pendency of the application to probate the will which
Aside from these practical considerations, there are, in our opinion, other reasons why plaintiffs in error are not aided by the law of lis pendens. In Bridger v. Exchange Bank, 126 Ga. 821, 826 (
The application to probate the will was a proceeding in rem. Re Brown’s will,
It follows that, irrespective of the other questions raised, it .was not erroneous to sustain the defendants’ demurrer. The case is therefore remanded to the superior court of Fulton County with direction that the suit be dismissed with costs against the plaintiffs.
Judgment affirmed.
