4 Ga. App. 375 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The point having been raised in this case that the pauper affidavit filed by the plaintiff in error is not properly entitled in the cause, we find, upon investigation, that while R. L. Selman is mentioned in the caption of the affidavit as the defendant in error, instead of R. L. Barnett, the number and the nature of the ease are fully stated in the title of the affidavit; and this entitles the affidavit sufficiently to leave no ground for doubt that it is applicable to this case and to no other. The test is, whether the affidavit is sufficiently entitled to be the basis of an indictment for perjury. We shall hold the pauper affidavit sufficient, although the name of the defendant in error is stated as R. L. Selman instead of R. L. Barnett, because the number, the term of the court, and the court itself are all mentioned in the pauper affidavit, and are identical with the rest of the record.
At last, but one question is really raised by the record. Has this plaintiff a right to recover damages ? For there can' be no question that, under the allegations of the petition, the defendant was guilty of a wrong. As we view the allegations of the petition, the plaintiff stood in loco parentis. She has the right to the custody and control of the child — which came naturally, peaceably, and exclusively into her possession from its mother — if not to the same degree and to the same extent as if it were her own, at least to such degree as to be entitled to protection against interference by a stranger who shows no higher right; She is entitled to its possession; and when the defendant unlawfully deprived her of that possession he was guilty of such a physical invasion of her rights as constitutes an actionable wrong. Therefore the general demurrer should not have been sustained.
Subsidiary to this question, the defendant insists that no measure of damages is set out in the petition. We hold that under the petition in the present case, the allegations upon that subject, contained in the 7th paragraph, are sufficient. The law presumes general damages from such a wrong, and the plaintiff says that she is entitled to punitive damages. Under our code these are measurable only by the enlightened conscience of an impartial jury. We think, therefore, that the measure of damages is sufficiently alleged to enable the jury to apply the rule of damages contained in §3907 of the Civil Code. The petition was sufficient to withstand a general demurrer. It sot forth the commission of a wrong, by which the defendant destroyed the rights of a person entitled to the possession and control of a child, whose custody and possession, as well as its service, she was entitled to enjoy. If it were the case of an actual mother and her child the kidnapping and concealment of her little one would cause untold pain and mental distress; and, no doubt, the same is true in some degree in the ease of this grandmother and her grandchild. In our opinion (as expressed in Glenn v. Western Union Tel. Co., 1 Ga.
Judgment reversed.