119 Ga. 133 | Ga. | 1903
H. K. Gairdner and J. H. Grogan were the executors of the will of George W. Dye. Both having died, Tate was appointed administrator with the will annexed of Dye’s estate. Tate cited Mrs. Lavonia Gairdner, as administratrix of the estate of H. K. Gairdner, and the executors of Grogan before the ordinary for the settlement of the accounts of the executors of Dye. The only allegation in the petition upon which the citation was based, as to the liability of the executors, was in the following words: “ There still remains in the estates of said H. K. Gairdner and John H. Grogan assets belonging to the estate of said Geo. W. Dye, deceased, to which your petitioner is entitled, that he may proceed to administer the estate of the said Geo. W. Dye.” The executors of Grogan answered the citation, denying the allegation above referred to, and also denying that the estate of their testator was in any manner liable for waste, mismanagement, interest, or funds of
While the motion for a new trial consists of the general grounds and ten special grounds referring to rulings of the judge directing findings by the jury on the exceptions of fact, those rulings which seem to us to be erroneous are confined to three of these grounds only. The other rulings are free from error, as, under the present condition of the pleadings, no other course was open to the judge than that which he followed. The errors in these three grounds will result in a reversal of the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial, which, in the absence of a direction by this court confining the effect of the judgment to the items involved in the three grounds which contain the erroneous rulings,. will have the effect to set aside the entire verdict. We might, in the exercise of the discretion with which the law invests this court, direct that the verdict and judgment be amended by striking two of the items of credit which the auditor erred in allowing, and inserting the item of debit which the auditor erred in striking ; but no request was made for such a direction, and we are not altogether clear that this course would be in the interest of justice. We will therefore reverse the judgment generally, and leave the case to be disposed of in accordance with the law applicable thereto when it comes before the judge again for final judgment. Judgment reversed.