Castellaw v. Guilmartin

Warner, Chief Justice.

This was a claim case in which the claimant had filed certain equitable pleas as set forth in the record, and on the trial of which, the jury, under the charge of the court, found the following verdict: “We, the jury, find for the claimants, in that the property was turned over by Robert Lachlison, executor, to claimants before suit was commenced; that the claim is barred by the statute of 1869; that McIntosh county court rendered judgment without proof or evidence.” The plaintiff made a motion for a new trial on the several alleged grounds of error contained therein, which was overruled by the court, and the plaintiff excepted.

The execution issued on a judgment obtained in McIntosh superior court in favor of the plaintiff, against the defendant as executor of Guilmartin, deceased, and was levied on the property claimed, in the possession of the claimants, as the property of Guilmartin, the defendant’s testator. The claimants alleged in their equitable plea, that the property levied on had been turned over to them as devisees thereof under the testator’s will, with the assent of the executor, before the commencement of the suit in which the judgment was obtained against the executor, and also, that the claim on which the judgment was rendered, was barred by the statute of limitations of 1869, and that the judgment was rendered by the court without any evidence, there being no issuable defense filed on oath. The evidence in the record as to the turning over the property by the executor to the claimants, *307was conflicting. The debt on which the judgment was obtained, was barred by the act of 1869, as it appears from the evidence in the record, if the executor had pleaded it in defense of the action brought against him. It was admitted on the trial of the claim case, that there was no evidence offered to prove the plaintiffs demand when the judgment was rendered against the executor in McIntosh superior court. The court charged the jury, in substance, that if the executor turned over the property to the claimants under the testator’s will, his assent would be implied, and that it would not be subject to the fi. fa. levied thereon. The court also charged the jury, that if the property had been turned over to the claimants by the executor as before stated, that then they would be subrogated to all the rights and defenses which Lachlison, the executor, originally had to the suit upon which this judgment is based, and could plead the statute of limitations of 1869. The court further charged the jury: “If you should find that the judgment was rendered in McIntosh superior court without proof, as it is admitted by counsel, and I recollect the fact that such was the case, then, as the suit was not based on an open account, the judge had no right to render the judgment without proof, and the judgment is void, and you should find for the claimants. In my view of the case, you are bound to find for the claimants.”

1. This being an equitable proceeding under the claimant’s equitable plea, the issues of fact involved in the case were specifically found by the jury under the provisions of the act of 1876, one of which was whether the property levied on had been turned over to the claimants by the executor as the devisees thereof under the testator’s will. Although the evidence was conflicting, and there being no error in the charge of the court in relation to this point in the case, there is sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the verdict as to that separate issue. See Lake vs. Hardee, 55 Ga. Rep., 667. The jury having found the above mentioned issue in favor of the claimants, the property was not subject to the execu*308tion levied thereon, and the claimants were entitled to judgment to that effect upon the verdict, notwithstanding the court may have erred in its charge to the jury in relation to the other issues submitted to them in regard to the statute of limitations, and the validity of the judgment obtained in McIntosh superior court, in view of the ruling of this court in the case of Castellaw vs. Guilmartin, 54 Ga. Rep., 299.

2. But for the explanatory note of the presiding judge to the fourth ground of alleged error in the charge of the court, to-wit: “ In my view of the case you are bound to find for the claimants,” we should have been constrained to have reversed the judgment. The judge, however, certified that he added, “ I mean by this, that if you find from the evidence the facts as alleged by the claimants, that then the fact that the court in McIntosh county rendered the judgment without proof makes such judgment invalid against the claimants, and they should recover in this action.” This charge of the court, according to the judge’s explanation thereof, related to the issue submitted to the jury in regard to the validity of the plaintiff’s judgment obtained in the superior court of McIntosh county, and not to the issue submitted to the jury, as to whether the property levied on had been turned over to the claimants by the executor, and, that being so, the verdict of the jury upon the last-mentioned issue was not affected by the alleged erroneous charge of the court. The jury having found by their verdict that the property levied on had been, turned over to the claimants by the executor of the testator, before the suit was commenced in which the judgment was obtained against him in favor of the plaintiffs, there was no error in overruling the motion for a new trial.

Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.