Supreme Court of Georgia, 1878

Board of Education v. Franklin

Board of Education v. Franklin
Supreme Court of Georgia · Decided August 29, 1878 · Jackson
61 Ga. 303

Board of Education v. Franklin

Opinion of the Court

Jackson, Justice.

The bill alleges that the property mortgaged is a trust estate belonging to complainants — to Mrs. Franklin for life, and remaindér to her children ; that her deceased husband *304owed the board of education and mortgaged the property; that after his death, she and her children were fraudulently induced to take up the old note and mortgage, and add thereto nine hundred dollai's more of indebtedness of deceased, and execute a new mortgage therefor; that they employed counsel to defend the application to foreclose upon ■the two houses and lots covered by the mortgage,,but he failed to do so, and the prayer was for the cancellation of the mortgage as fraudulently procured, and the staying of the fi.fa. until the hearing. The court granted the injunction as to the life-tenant, Mrs. Franklin, and the defendants excepted. There was an answer swearing off the equity, if any, of the bill, and depositions on each side in respect to the alleged fraud on the part of the board in procuring the mortgage from Mrs. Franklin and family; but in the view we entertain of the case, it is unnecessary to consider any of this evidence.

This defense could have been as well pleaded and insisted upon on the application to foreclose, as after that judgment. There is no pretense of any equity ai-ising since the judgment of foreclosure, nor of any fraud in the procurement of that judgment; nor that by any conduct of the board the mortgagors were prevented from making their defense ; nor that counsel employed, if employed at all, was prevented by collusion of any sort with the board from defending the proceeding to foreclose. If he failed in his duty, his clients must look to him for redress; if he was not employed, which he swears, and so does his partner at the time, and so his books show, the fault is exclusively that of complainants ; and even if he was employed it was still their duty, so far as the mortgagees are concerned, to see to it that he discharged his duty, by going to his office and advising about the case — both the counsel and themselves living in the same town. In any view there is gross want of diligence in the defense of the proceedings to foreclose, and no sort of sufficient reason for the neglect of the case, and no charge of blame on defendants to the bill for such failure to defend.

*305Therefore, this bill and application for injunction comes too late, and under the rulings of this court the complainants are concluded by their failure to defend the petition to foreclose the mortgage. See 13 Ga., 389, 393-4; 18 Ib., 476, 487-8-9 ; 56 Ib., 94 ; 59 Ib., 230.

Judgment reversed.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.