55 Ga. 98 | Ga. | 1875
This suit was brought against the Bank of Louisiana by service of garnishment upon Thomas S. Metcalf, in the year 1863. Metcalf answered that he owed the bank nothing, and had no effects of the bank in his hands at the time of the ser-v vice. This answer was traversed; he died pending suit, and his executor was made a party. The jury found, under the charge of the court, for Metcalf; a motion for a new trial was made on various grounds alleged in the record, overruled bn all, and the case is before us on assignment of error thereon-
Mr. Metcalf must needs have obeyed the mandate of the Confederacy. He could not have invoked the courts of Georgia to aid him in resisting the orders of that government. The military power of the Confederacy was upon her, and the civil magistrates of Georgia were all in vineulis by the bond of a solemn oath; and if he had appealed to either t.o help him retain this fund, he would have been derided, possibly maltreated, perhaps executed for treason, for his pains. The law is the highest reason — akin to Him who is the author of all real law, .and the fountain of all pure reason; it is his offspring; and to hold a man liable out of his private estate under the facts admitted here, would be to sin against the law, against justice and equity, and the pure fountain from which they all flow.
Judgment affirmed.