113 Ga. 1114 | Ga. | 1901
There are two cases pending in this court, in each of which practically the same principles of law, resting upon the same facts, are involved, and the same person is the plaintiff in error. The first is that of Tindall v. Nisbet, clerk, in which a judgment rendered by Judge Candler, of the Stone Mountain circuit, holding the plaintiff in error to be in contempt of the superior court of Bibb county, is sought to be reversed. In the second case, which is entitled Tindall v. Westcott, sheriff, the same plaintiff in error seeks to reverse a judgment rendered by Judge J. H. Lumpkin, of the Atlanta circuit, which refuses to discharge the plaintiff in error from the custody of the sheriff of Bibb county, under the commitment made by Judge Candler. These two cases were by consent presented together in this court, and the adjudication now made determines each. After a careful examination of the record, and a consideration of the alleged errors which the faithful and able counsel representing the plaintiff in error insists were committed on the hearing of the cases in the superior court, we are forced to the conclusion that no error was committed by Judge Candler.in the rulings made in the contempt case, nor by Judge Lumpkin in the hearing of the writ of habeas corpus; and we affirm the judgment rendered in each of said cases. Many of the rulings made directly by Judge Candler were necessarily passed on by Judge Lumpkin on the hearing had before him. Without passing, in detail, on the several rulings made by Judge Candler which were not involved in the petition seeking a discharge from the custody of the sheriff,if indeed there be any, it is sufficient to say that in our judgment no error which entitles plaintiff to another hearing on'the proceedings to attach him for contempt, or to set aside the judgment finding him to be in contempt of court and ordering his imprisonment, was committed. In passing on the several questions raised on the hearing before him, his honor Judge Candler, in rendering his judgment, did not, in detail, elaborate the principles of law upon which his decision was made to rest. But in formulating the judgment by which he refused to discharge the plaintiff in error from the cus.
“In passing upon a proceeding seeking to obtain a discharge from custody by writ of habeas corpus, it is my general custom -simply to order a discharge, or to refuse it and remand the prisoner. But the present case is one of such importance and interest that I feel it to be the duty of the presiding judge to do more than this, ¡and to give some expression of his views on some of the principal points involved. This is indeed an important case. It is important to the prisoner, because it involves his liberty. It is important to the courts, because it involves the question whether they' ■can have the assets which they take into their custody preserved,, ■and see that their receivers honestly and faithfully discharge their ■duties and properly dispose of property and funds entrusted to their keeping, or whether they can not; in a word, whether they can •control their receivers, or whether their receivers shall control them. It is also of interest to the judges to know whether, after •one of them has carefully and patiently considered the conduct of -a receiver and has adjudged him in contempt, another judge of like •court will promptly upset his judgment and turn the prisoner loose •on a writ of habeas corpus. Of course, if the detention is illegal the prisoner will be promptly discharged, but if it is a matter of •discretion, or of reviewing what the judge who rendered the judgment has done, the second judge should not be over-ready to interfere. Such appeals should be more naturally addressed to the judge whose judgment is sought to be modified or revoked, or to some other judge with proper jurisdiction, hy petition, rather than to another judge by petition for habeas corpus. This case is also of great interest to the public. When creditors'or others institute-proceedings under which a receiver is appointed, they and the defendants would like to know whether such appointment is a means-
“ Many of the points made by the petitioner have been passed upon and concluded by the judgment of the Hon. John S. Candler, before whom the rule against the receiver was tried, and who adjudged him in contempt and sentenced him to jail. To have so adjudged must necessarily have covered and concluded every fact necessary to such adjudication. A writ of habeas corpus is not a means of reviewing a judgment, or of considering whether there were any errors or irregularities in it; but the judgment must be so far void that the detention under it is illegal, in order to authorize a discharge under this writ. A motion to modify or a writ of error may reach errors or irregularities, if any exist. To a large part, if not all, of the petition I might have sustained the demurrer of respondent; but, in the interest of a full and thorough hearing, wherever a question of liberty is at stake, I preferred to reserve the rulings on the law questions so raised, and decide the case after having before me all that might be lawfully offered. To illustrate, in Judge Candler’s judgment it is stated that it is adjudged that the receiver ‘has been and is now in contempt of court,’ and it is ordered and adjudged that he ‘be required to at once pay to the clerk of the court the sum of $6,021.17, the same being the amount which is hereby adjudged to be in his hands, with which he is properly chargeable under the evidence, and for which he has failed and refused to account/ That such judgment is conclusive unless reversed or set aside, see Thweatt v. Kiddoo, 58 Ga. 300. It is suggested that the decree directing the receiver to pay over the funds to the clerk was not based on pleadings or the record. I do not understand that a judge can give no direction to a receiver except upon pleadings of parties and findings. The receiver is his officer and subject to his directions and findings. Suppose he deemed a certain action of the receiver necessary for the preservation of the fund, is he powerless to order it unless somebody presents pleadings about it ? Must he induce some one to plead and get a judgment before he can order the receiver to do some necessary thing? A verdict or auditor’s report rarely, if ever, undertakes to direct the receiver what to do. It finds debts, amounts, and priorities,, and leaves the judge to decree how and when the receiver shall pay out or deal with the fund in his hands,
“ It is urged with great earnestness and ability that Judge Felton was disqualified from presiding in the equity case in which the receiver was appointed, and was -disqualified from making the decree which contained a direction to the receiver to deliver the fund to the clerk; that the decree as to the receiver was a nullitythat the rule was dependent on it, and, being dependent on a nullity, must itself be void.. It is quite true, if a proceeding is dependent for its own validity upon a nullity, it must fall. It may be doubted whether the proceeding before and judgment of Judge Candler were wholly dependent upon Judge Felton’s decree. But suppose they were, is that any ground of defense to the receiver? In the first place, this same man was a member of a firm who were plaintiffs in the petition under which the receiver was appointed; they saw the case steadily proceed, without objection; this petitioner himself heard Judge Felton discuss his disqualification and decline tfc> preside in the case unless by consent or agreement, heard the judge, when urged'to preside, inquire if there were any objection, sat silently by and saw him preside and make the decree. Can he be heard to say that Judge Felton was disqualified ? It is said that he was only a party to the decree as a creditor and not as a receiver, and hence was only bound or estopped in the former character. But he is the same man, and he saw and heard, and said not a word in any character. Even if a judge who was disqualified by reason of relationship to try a case should preside and render a decree, his disqualification could not be set up as a ground for a writ of habeas corpus. Daniels v. Towers, 79 Ga. 785; Shope v. State, 106 Ga. 226. Again, this very receiver,as receiver, made a report
“ It is also urged that the receiver was entitled to a trial by jury under the rule against him; and this is claimed both under the constitution and the acts of the legislature. This very question was before Judge Candler and was tried by him, and a writ of habeas corpus is not the mode of reviewing his decision. 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d ed.) 176; People v. District Court, 46 L. R. A. 855. But aside from this, the constitution of 1877 (Code, § 5876) provides that ‘The right of trial by jury, except where it is otherwise provided in this constitution, shall remain inviolate.’ This provision confers no new right of trial by jury, but merely guarantees that ‘the right of trial by jury [that is, the pre-existing or established right] shall remain inviolate.’ Has there ever existed any right on the part of a receiver, who disobeys the orders of the court of his appointment and violates his duty, to demand a jury trial ? He has never had any such right to be violated, and the constitution has no reference to any such matter. Through all the English practice and in all the practice under the various constitutions of this State, if any such right was ever allowed or established, I am not aware of it. 154 U. S. 447 (6), Brinson’s case; 134 U. S. 31—40 (4), (5), Ellenbecker’s case. In Akers v. Veal, 66 Ga. 302, it is held .that ‘ A receiver, when called upon by the court to account for funds in his hands, can not command a jury to pass upon such accounts.’’
“In Akers v. Veal, 66 Ga. 302-304, supra, it is said: ‘Receivers are but the officers of the court appointing them, and they are required to account to the court for all receipts and disbursements of the fund received by them. They are not governed by the same rules that regulate the proceedings between parties litigant. Ordinarily they will not be allowed to make expenditures' ■which will materially reduce the fund in their hands without the-sanction of the court; and they should get permission as to such
“ It is suggested that the limit of twenty days imprisonment provided for an act of contempt applies. Not so. A failure or refusal to comply with the order of the court to deliver or 'pay money or the like, or to purge the contempt, is a continuing contempt, and the court may pass judgment that its officer be imprisoned until he shall comply. Cobb v. Black, 34 Ga. 162, 166. It is a civil proceeding. Drakeford v. Adams, 98 Ga. 722. It is suggested that there are two things set out in the proceedings: one, disobedience in drawing the checks; and the other, refusing to pay the funds as ordered. It is probable that both were closely allied and be
“Finally, it is said that there should be a discharge of this prisoner, because he testifies that he can not pay the sum required of him or comply with the order of the court. There is no explanation of what he has done with the money, but only the bald statement that he is unable to pay it. Shall receivers, sheriffs, and attorneys, who have funds entrusted to their care, be discharged by merely saying that they have spent the money which did not belong to them, and can not pay ? Surely not. To wrongfully place one’s self in such a position gives no right of discharge. It is true that perpetual punishment is not contemplated; but a showing of' inability does not give any actual right to terminate imprisonment, but addresses itself to the discretion of the judge. In Kingsbery v. Ryan, 92 Ga. 114, it is said that ‘If, as a result of the investí-'
Judgment in each case affirmed.