181 Ga. 563 | Ga. | 1935
The motion to dismiss the writ of error is on the ground that all parties in the case before the trial court as defendants and interested in sustaining the judgment therein have not been named as defendants in error, and have not been served with a copy of the bill of exceptions or waived service of the same. In passing upon the motion it is necessary to note that in a cross-petition the parties do not necessarily include all that were named in the main suit. In the petition brought by the trustees of the church, which is detailed in the first part of the statement of the case, petitioners named as defendant Georgia Construction and Loan Company, for the obvious reason that that company held a fi. fa. which had been issued pursuant to the judgment obtained by H. C. Holbrook in the suit on the note hereinbefore mentioned, and might be said (though it is not necessary so to decide in this phase of the proceedings) to be interested in sustaining the judgment in the main suit. H. C. Holbrook was evidently named as a defendant because the judgment had been obtained by him, and Ful-Kalb Inc. was named because that corporation was the purchaser from Holbrook of his bid at the sale of the property of the church and was the grantee in the deed executed by J. M. George, marshal, who also was named as a defendant. But the present case differs from the main suit as to parties, notwithstanding that it is ancillary thereto and brought by one of the defendants by means of a cross-petition. Under the old practice it was necessary that a defendant, if he desired to bring what is now a cross-petition, file a separate suit; whereas
Whatever right to an injunction existed in favor of Ful-Kalb Inc. was necessarily by reason of the title, if any, which it held by virtue of the deed executed to it by the marshal of the municipal court of Atlanta. It does not allege that it had any other right to the use of the property. If, therefore, the judgment was void, as claimed by the trustees, the grantee in the deed acquired no rights as against the trustees. It appears from the undisputed evidence that “ St. Luke Baptist Church” was an unincorporated and unregistered religious society or organization which was using certain property, the title to which was held by the trustees in their name. In evidence was a deed to the predecessors of the present trustees; also, an affidavit that the present trustees were duly and regularly elected and had been in continuous possession of the property, notwithstanding certain interference on the part of Ful-Kalb Inc. through its president. Has anything been done in the proceedings hereinbefore detailed to divest that title? We think not. The suit on the note was against “St. Luke’s Baptist Church, an organization of certain persons among whom are Thomas Hill and Otis Dubose,” and against “Legree Franklin, Thomas Hill, R. L. Rutherford, John Henderson, H. A. Smith, and Eugene Dooley.” Plainly, only two were named as members of the church, and there was no allegation that they constituted the entire membership or even a majority thereof. The petition was served on “St. Luke’s Baptist Church, a corporation, by leaving a copy of the within action and summons with Thomas Hill, its agent,” and was also served on the other individuals. That is not such service as will bind the legal holders of the title to the church property, and it is not purported service on even a majority of the membership. Thomas Hill testified by affidavit that, though a member of the church, he was not an agent of the church or of the trustees thereof. There was no evidence to the contrary. The only answer filed in the suit was as follows: “Now
In the Wilkins case, supra, the court said: “It is not pretended that the members of this society, at the date of the commencement of the suit, are the persons, all of them, who were members at the time of the contract. The whole scope of the proof and the form of the suit is against the society as such. . . The suit does not even go against the parties as joint contractors, but against the society, as such, by its name, represented by its officers. . . We are clear that this action, so far as it is a suit against the society, as such, can not be sustained. Had its members all been served they might be charged as joint promissors, contracting through an agent, or as partners, contracting in a firm name. But this is a suit against the church, as an entity, and the service is upon the
Ful-Kalb Inc., however, claimed that the attorney who answered for the named defendants in the suit by Holbrook represented the church, and introduced in evidence his affidavit, the substantial portions of which are as follows: “That in the case of H. C. Holbrook vs. The St. Luke Baptist Church et al., Muncipal Court of Atlanta, No. 312452, deponent was attorney at law of record for the said St. Luke Baptist Church, a religious, unincorporated so-' ciety, and Legree Franklin, Thomas Hill, R. L. Rutherford, John Henderson, and H. A. Smith. Deponent further states that he tried said case, representing the' Saint Luke’s Baptist Church . . Deponent further states that Thomas Hill, one of the trustees of said unincorporated religious society, was also an indorser and a trustee of said church, and that said unincorporated religious society was served by serving Thomas Hill with a copy of the petition and process.” The affidavit was admitted over the objection of the trustees, and error is assigned on that ruling. Even assuming that it was admissible for anything it might be worth, the evidence demanded.a finding that in representing “St. Luke Baptist Church” he represented nothing but a name. The minutes showed that Thomas Hill, whom he alleged to be a trustee, was not in fact an officer. By serving him with a copy of the petition and process, no service was made upon the trustees or upon the member