113 Ga. 166 | Ga. | 1901
At the February term, 1897, of Jackson superior court, on motion of Sisson, administrator, tbe award of the arbitrators in the case of Sisson, administrator, v. Pittman was made the judgment of the court, the award being in favor of the administrator, who was plaintiff in a case theretofore pending in said court against Pittman, and which was withdrawn and submitted to arbitration. *At the February, term, 1899, of said court, on motion of Pittman the judgment granted at the February term, 1897, making the award the judgment of the court, was set aside on the ground that the arbitrators were not sworn according to law. At the February term, 1900, Sisson, administrator, came and moved to set aside the judgment rendered at the February term, 1899, setting aside the judgment which made the award of the arbitrators the judgment of the court. This motion was predicated on two grounds: First, that the judgment rendered at the February term, 1899, which set aside the judgment rendered at the February term, 1897 (the latter being the judgment which made the award the judgment of the court), was improvidently granted, because the parties failed to present to the court the whole record of the case. Second, that the oath taken by the arbitrators was substantially correct, and sufficient to meet the requirements of the statute in the absence of fraud, th¿ submission being under the common law. The motion was overruled, and Sissqn excepted.
Judgment affirmed.