23 Ga. App. 636 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1919
1. “Where attorneys retain in their hands the money of their clients after it has been demanded, they are liable to rule (and otherwise) as sheriffs are, and incur the same penalties and consequences.” Civil Code (1910), § 4954. The judge having jurisdiction of the application may grant a rule nisi thereon against the attorney subject thereto (Civil Code, § 5346) ; and upon such rule nisi being granted, the attorney should respond in writing under oath, and if such answer is not denied the rule will be discharged or made absolute according as the court may deem the answer sufficient or not; but if
3. The court did not err in refusing to allow the movant to amend her . petition, since by the proposed amendment she sought to add to or vary by parol the terms of the unambiguous written contract, under which the respondent claimed the funds in question.
4. Since, under all the pleadings entered undei\ the rule, including the traverse to the respondent’s answer, there was no issue for determination by a jury by virtue of which the respondent could be held liable under the rule, unless the Court should construe the contract adversely to the reasonable contention relied upon by the attorney, the court did not err in dismissing such quasi-penal proceeding “without prejudice to the right of movant to sue and adjudicate the questions at issue in any court having jhrisdiction thereof.”
Judgment affirmed.