40 Ga. App. 364 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
Tlic controlling issue in Ibis case is wlictlier or not a party can proceed by affidavit of illegality attacking the legal procedure which resulted in an execution against him, when a court of equity has ruled upon the merits of the issue involved in the statutory action. The plaintiff in error in this case, and others, petitioned the City of Atlanta to lay certain pavement, which was done. Thereafter the plaintiff in error and others sought to enjoin the enforcement of the paving ordinance, the contract, the assessments against the abutting property so improved, and the validation of the bonds, and to enjoin the city from collecting any amount whatever from abutting property owners. The Supreme Court, in Montgomery v. City of Atlanta, 162 Ga. 534 (134 S. E. 152, 17 A. L. R. 233), held that a petition for such an injunction' would not lie. The plaintiff in error, who was a party to that suit, now seeks by affidavit of illegality to avoid payment for such pavement. In the Montgomery case, supra, the 1th headnote is as follows : .“Equity requires every litigant who seeks her aid to do equity; and inasmuch as the construction company has expended large sums of money in making this street improvement, of which the city and the plaintiffs have received the benefit, equity will not interpose in behalf of the plaintiffs to annul and set aside the contract for such improvement and the assessment levied against them as owners of abutting property for their shares of the cost of such improvement, although such contract and assessment are illegal and invalid, unless the plaintiff shall first do equity; and to do equity the plaintiffs must pay their proportionate shares of the cost of making such improvement, in the absence of actual fraud on the part of the construction company.” In the opinion in that case Justice Hines, speaking for the court, said: “They are seeking to have said contract and assessment declared illegal and void. They are seeking to restrain the City of Atlanta from carrying on proceedings to validate a proposed issue of bonds for the payment of the cost of said improvement, and from selling and disposing of the same; and they are seeking to enjoin the construction companj’' from taking any legal proceedings, or other steps of any character whatsoever, to enforce the collection of its claim against the City of Atlanta for such payment, from undertaking to procure
We think the decision in the Montgomery case is controlling in this case, because the merits of and the object sought in that case are identical with those in the instant case. As was said in Baldwin v. McCrea, 38 Ga. 651, “A party can not avoid the effect of a solemn adjudication 'of his rights in a court of competent jurisdiction by a change of forum from the equity to the law side of the court. The maxim ’res judicatse pro vertitate accipiuntur’ is applicable.” See also Hood v. Duren, 33 Ga. App. 203 (2) (125 S. E. 787); Sellers v. Cox, 127 Ga. 246 (2) (56 S. E. 284); Evans v. Birge, 11 Ga. 265; Pollock v. Gilbert, 16 Ga. 399 (60 Am. D. 732); City of Camilla v. Cochran, 160 Ga. 424 (128 S. E. 194); Farris v. Manchester, 168 Ga. 653 (149 S. E. 27). The affidavit of illegality interposed here sets up that defense or claims that legal right which would have been presented prior to the assessment against the property. In other words, the affidavit of illegality seeks to go ’’behind the judgment.” The court properly overruled the affidavit of illegality.
Judgment affirmed.