124 Ga. 980 | Ga. | 1906
1. The construction to be placed upon the Civil Code, §3511 (which declares that a discharge obtained by an administrator “by means of any fraud practiced on the heirs or the ordinary is void, and may be set aside on motion and proof of the fraud”), is that while the judgment of the court of ordinary discharging an administrator is open to attack on the ground that it was fraudulently procured, it is to be deemed “void” only when, in a proceeding to set it aside, the proof shows it was secured by practicing a fraud upon the heirs at law or upon the ordinary. Read in connection with the context, the term “void” is to be understood as the equivalent of “voidable.” See 29 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 1068 and cit. The provisions of this section of the code do not alter the cardinal rule that a judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction and regular upon its face is to be deemed conclusive until it is duly set aside, either on motion in the court in which it was rendered, or in an equitable proceeding instituted in the superior court. Carter v. Anderson, 4 Ga. 516; Mobley v. Mobley, 9 Ga. 249; Jacobs v. Pou, 18 Ga. 346; Cook v. Weaver, 77 Ga. 10; Pollock v. Cox, 108 Ga. 433-4.
2. “All proceedings of every kind in any court of this State, to set aside judgments or decrees of the courts, must be made within three years from the rendering of said judgments or decrees.” Civil Code, §3764. ■ While the discharge of an administrator does not constitute a bar as to
Judgment affirmed.