v.
ALLEN
Mrs. Morehead, as successor in title under Lathrop & Company, claimed, as against the children of W. D. Allen and his wife, to have a perfect title by virtue of the deed made by Mrs. Allen under authority of the order of the judge of the superior court, purporting to convey both her life interest and the remainder interest of her children to Lathrop & Company, covering the 700 acres of land. She further contended, that if this deed did not convey perfect title to the remainder interest of the children, Lathrop & Company held a deed made by the United States marshal under a public sale based upon an execution against Allen; that the original deed made by Allen to his wife, with remainder to their children, born and to be born, was made for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding his creditors, including one Cooper, whose administrator afterwards recovered a judgment against Allen under which the marshal’s sale took place; and that the deed made by Allen was without consideration, and was never delivered, and therefore that the plaintiff had a title under the marshal’s deed, superior to any claim of the children under the deed of their father.
Turning to the first point above stated, in regard to the proceedings before the judge of the superior court and the deed made under it, let us see if those proceedings are to be considered as[*813] regularly before tbe superior court and dealt with by that court as such, or whether they are to be treated as proceedings at chambers before the judge, not the court, and acted on by him as such. The general aspect of the proceedings is rather that of a matter at chambers before the judge than of one before the court. In the first place, the application made by Mrs. Allen stated that it was in her own right and as next friend of her minor children. No defendants were named and no process prayed. There was a prayer that their father be appointed their guardian ad litem, and that he show cause, if any existed, why the sale and settlement should not be made as proposed. On this an order was entered which declared on its face that it was granted at chambers on December 13, 1873. It required Allen, as guardian ad' litem for his children, to show cause within ten days from its date why the sale should not be made, regardless of whether Houston superior court remained in session for that length of time, thus being returnable on its face without regard to whether the court would be in session. Again, the proceedings do not bear any evidence of having been filed as court papers. It may be said that these things may be treated as irregularities rather than as making a proceeding in equity void; but they may be mentioned as throwing light upon the real character of the proceeding, and as corroborating-the next ground, which we shall state, for holding them to be chambers proceedings. The order which was finally granted by the judge stated on its face that it was “at chambers, Perry, Ga., December 13, 1873.” The term “chambers” is defined by Bur-rill in his Law Dictionary as “the office or private rooms of a judge, where parties -are heard, and orders made in matters not requiring to be brought before the full court; and.where costs are taxed, judgments signed, and similar business transacted.” Bouvier’s Law Dictionary says: “Any hearing before a judge which does not take place during a term of court or while the judge is sitting in court, or an order issued under such circumstances, is said to be in chambers. The act may be an. official one, and the hearing may be in the court-room; but if the court is not in session, it is still said to be done in chambers ” In Pittsburg Ry. Co. v. Hurd, 17 O. St. 144, it is said: “Jurisdiction at chambers is incidental to and grows out of the jurisdiction of the court itself. It is the power to hear and determine, out of court[*814] such, questions arising between the parties to a controversy, as might well be determined by the court itself, but which the legislature has seen fit to entrust to the judgment „of a single judge, out of court, without requiring them to be brought before the court in actual session.” In Frawley v. Cosgrove, 83 Wis. 441, 445 (53 N. W. 689), Cassoday, J., said, in the opinion: “This court has frequently held that ‘a judge at chambers’ is simply a judge of a court of.record acting out of court.” Expressions such as “in the judge’s chambers,” “at his chambers,” and the like, have sometimes been construed in the light of general provisions of statutes or constitutions in which they occurred, and the legislative or constitutional intent has been the main point to be arrived at, rather than the exact meaning of the expression “at chambers” taken alone as characteristic of a certain kind of procedure. Generally the question as to whether a proceeding was at chambers.or was a part of the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court as such has arisen in this State in cases where the action complained of took place in vacation. But we can not declare, as matter of law, that everything which a judge does between the opening of his session of court and its close is essentially a court procedure rather than one at chambers. In some counties the terms of court last for several months at a time. While the term is still continuing the judge may pass orders in the exercise of his powers at chambers. The distinction between the two kinds of acts on the part of the judge is not limited to the mere question of whether they are- done between the general commencement of a term of court and its close, or in vacation. To illustrate, during the pendency of a term of court, a judge' may have an application made to him for the appointment of a temporary receiver of the granting of a temporary restraining order. These things he may act upon, but they are not inherently a part of the procedure of the court in term time. Under his powers as chancellor he might grant such orders in vacation as well as in term time. He need not have granted them in open court, or even in connection with the proceedings of the then pending term of court. It not infrequently happens that while a judge is holding a term of court in one county of his circuit, applications for temporary injunctions, restraining orders, the appointment of receivers, and the like, in other counties are presented to him and acted upon by Mm. But such action does[*815] not become a part of the proceedings of the court then pending. They are at chambers although granted while the court in one county is actually going on. In Chicago Ry. Co. v. St. Clair, 144 Ind. 371 (42 N. E. 225), it was held that “A judge of the circuit court, who is holding a session in one of the counties in his circuit, may make an order appointing a receiver in an action brought in another county, under section 1236, E. S. 1894, providing that receivers may be appointed by the court or the judge thereof ‘in vacation.’ ” The expression “at chambers,” as characterizing the action of the judge as such, and not as a court, is recognized in our code. Thus section 4320 of the Civil Code deals with the jurisdiction and authority of the superior courts. Section 4321 deals with the authority of the judges of the superior courts.
In subsection 4 of the latter section it is declared that the' judges have power to hear and determine “questions arising upon writs of habeas corpus or bail, when properly brought before them; all motions to grant, revive, or dissolve injunctions, to give new security or lessen the amount of bail; and to perform any and all other acts required of them at chambers.”
In the case before us the judge declared on the face of his order that he was acting at chambers, and consequently not as a court in session; and we have endeavored to show that the whole proceeding bore other indicia that this was the case. It is urged that the proceedings were recorded on the minutes of Houston superior court of the day when the judge’s order bore date; but if it were a matter in which the judge had- the authority to act at chambers or even in vacation, he would nevertheless have directed due entry to be made upon the minutes of the court of the proper county. The fact that the entire proceedings were ordered to be entered on the minutes and were so entered would tend to indicate that they were considered as matters dealt with at chambers and specially to be placed upon the minutes by order, instead of a regular case in equity before the court, in which the orders and judgments and decrees are recorded without any special direction from the judge, and the pleadings are not commonly entered.on the minutes.
If the action taken was that of the judge at chambers and not that of the superior court, then, as several times held by this court, the judge bad no authority to order a sale of the legal title[*816] of minors to real estate, whether it appeared- to be beneficial or not. There was no trust and no executorship here involved, nor a will impossible of execution, as in some of the cases. Pughsley v. Pughsley, 75 Ga. 95; Rogers v. Pace, 75 Ga. 436; Fleming v. Hughes, 99 Ga. 450 (27 S. E. 791); Mills v. Geer, 111 Ga. 275 (36 S. E. 673, 52 L. R. A. 934); Well v. Hides, 117 Ga. 335 (43 S. E. 738); Mitchell v. Turner, 117 Ga. 958 (44 S. E. 17).
The order under consideration was granted in 1873, and the act of 1889 (Civil Code, §2545) is in no way involved.
In the ease of McGowan v. Lufburrow, 82 Ga. 523 (9 S. E. 427, 14 Am. St. R. 178), parol evidence was admitted without objection, and the Supreme Court dealt with the evidence before it, not with the question of its admissibility. Furthermore, the Justice who prepared the opinion said that “It is true that on the back it is marked ‘in chambers;’ but these words were left out by the clerk when he recorded the decree on the minutes of the court.” As a matter of fact the original record of file in the office of the clerk of this court shows that the words “in chambers” occurred in the heading of the order, and not merely on the back of the papef, and that they were not recorded on the minutes by the clerk; but the quotation from the opinion above made shows that it was inadvertently treated as if those words were only a part of the entries on the back of the record, which were not included by the clerk in recording the order.
It was contended that under the decision in this ease when formerly before this court (127 Ga. 510 (56 S. E. 745)), the evidence should have been admitted; but we do not think that the decision then rendered is subject to such construction. We then called attention to several of the circumstances mentioned in this opinion as tending to show that the judge treated the matter before him as a chambers proceeding, distinguished the case from that of McGowan v. Lufburrow, supra, stated that no presumption would arise in favor of the order which would overcome the statement of the judge that it was granted at chambers, and remanded the case to the superior court for a new trial, which was rendered[*818] necessary for another reason. No question of the admissibility of evidence was then before ns, and accordingly none was decided.
Judgment affirmed.