Crockett & Co. v. Garrard & Co.

61 S.E. 552, 4 Ga. App. 360, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 298
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 18, 1908
Docket1018
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 552 (Crockett & Co. v. Garrard & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crockett & Co. v. Garrard & Co., 61 S.E. 552, 4 Ga. App. 360, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 298 (Ga. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Powell, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. We have an express provision in this State that, “If there are several pleas filed by the defendant, a verdict for the defendant must show upon which of the pleas the verdict is rendered.” Civil Code, §5330. The plaintiff may invoke this requirement any time before verdict has been finally received and the jury has dispersed. Continental Bank v. Folsom, 67 Ga. 625; Williams v. Gunnells, 66 Ga. 521; Rabun v. Rabun, 61 Ga. 652. The request in the case at bar was timely and should have been granted, if the cause was one in which the rule is applicable. By its terms the rule is applicable only when there is more than one plea filed; and this is determined not by the particular form in which the defense is presented, but by the substance of it. For instance, where the defendant files a defense which, from the diverse form in which it is stated, apparently presents several separate pleas, but in fact consists of only one, the rule is not applicable. Ventress v. Rosser, 73 Ga. 534. Note also the query of Chief Justice Bleckley in Jones v. Grantham, 80 Ga. 472 (7), 479 (5 S. E. 764). Contra-[363]*363wise the defendant may in one paragraph or in one sentence assert several distinct pleas; and in such ease the plaintiff has the right to invoke the rule.

Looking to the defense presented in this case, we find that the defendants denied the paragraph in which the membership of the partnership was asserted, also the paragraph in which the making of the contract was alleged; also the paragraph setting up the breaches; and additionally set up that all breaches which had occurred had been settled by the payment of a definite sum of money. The plaintiff says this amounted to several pleas; the defendant says it is but a sole defense.

2. Under the Neel act (now Civil Code, §4961), the plaintiff in his petition must set forth the cause of action in orderly and distinct paragraphs, consecutively numbered; the defendant in his answer must admit or deny (or excuse a failure to deny, by an asserted lack of information) each and every paragraph of the petition. Whether a categorical denial of the respective paragraphs of a petition containing a number of distinct allegations is to be given the same effect as the filing of a number of separate pleas under the old system of pleading, depends upon the facts in each particular case. Eemembering that it was not the intention of the Neel act to diminish the degree of certainty with which the defendant was already required to assert his defenses, we shall soon see that the categorical denial of an allegation in the petition frequently can be given no effect at all as a defense.

We will exemplify this proposition by the very answer of the defendants now before us. Suppose that instead of admitting, as they did, the basic fact of the venue, — namely, that one of the defendants resided in the county in which the suit was filed,— they had simply denied the paragraph of the petition in which this fact was asserted. This would not have been sufficient as a plea to the jurisdiction; such pleas are to be stated with formality, and require allegations additional to a mere denial of the defendant’s residence within the venue. The denial of the allegation as to residence would therefore neither put the plaintiff to proof of the fact, nor entitle the defendants to disprove it; it could not be given effect at all; and certainly would not constitute a separate plea in the sense of the Civil Code, §5330. Upon looking further at the answer before us, we find a denial of that paragraph of the [364]*364petition in which the execution of the written contract is alleged. Is this to operate as a plea of non est factum? If not, the plaintiff is not called upon to prove the execution of the paper. Strange v. Barrow, 65 Ga. 23. See also Barwick v. Kea, 85 Ga. 564 (11 S. E. 871); Lowe Cracker Co. v. Ginn, 94 Ga. 408 (20 S. E. 106); Matthews v. Bates, 93 Ga. 319 (20 S. E. 320). A plea of non ést factum must he under oath, and must aver not only that the alleged maker did not sign the instrument, hut that it is not his act or deed. Civil Code, §3701; Wingate v. Atlanta National Bank, 95 Ga. 1 (4), (22 S. E. 37). The denial under consideration is of no defensive value, in the form in which it is stated, and therefore does not constitute a distinct plea.’ The denial of the paragraphs in which the breaches of the contract are set forth has the same effect that a plea of the general issue would have had under the old practice. This plea is not required to be verified, or to be stated with any particular formality. This denial therefore constitutes a distinct and separate plea, and is to be given effect as such in the trial of the case and in the application of the Civil Code, §5330.

The only other denial now requiring attention relates to the paragraph in which the membership of the partnership is alleged. To this denial the trial judge gave so great effect that he charged the jury that if the plaintiff had not proved this paragraph of the petition just as he had -alleged it, — if he had not shown that the partnership was composed of the persons whose names were set out as constituting it, — the jury should investigate the case no further, but should return a verdict for the defendants. The Civil Code, §2637, provides: “Parties suing or being sued in their firm name, the partnership need not be proved unless denied by the -defendant, upon oath, on plea in abatement filed." For this code section and its peculiar language, the act of 1841 (Cobb’s Digest, 590) is in part responsible. In the preamble to that act it is recited, that many of the judges of the superior court (the Supreme Court had not then been established) had been holding that in cases sued in the name of joint traders or copartners, a recovery could not be had, unless the plaintiff proved such a copartnership existed; it was therefore enacted, that “it shall not be deemed or held necessary, in any of the courts of law or equity of this State, for a firm of joint traders or copartners in any business, trade or [365]*365profession, who are or hereafter may be plaintiff, in any cause pending in either of said courts, to prove their copartnership: provided, nevertheless, that nothing contained in this act shall prevent said courts, or any of them, from requiring such proof in any case where the defendant or defendants shall, regularly, by plea in abatement, deny the existence of such firm or copartnership,, as may be set forth by the plaintiffs in their bill, petition, declaration or writ.”

Soon after the section above quoted was inserted into the code in substantially the same language in which it now stands, the expression “on plea in abatement filed” met with criticism from the Supreme Court, in the case of Long v. McDonald, 39 Gad 187. In the third headnote in that case the following language is used: “A plea denying the existence of a partnership is a plea in bar, and, although sworn to, is not a dilatory plea which is required to be filed at the first term of the court;” and this language is quoted approvingly and applied in the case of Solomon v. Creech, 82 Ga. 445 (9 S. E. 165).

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 552, 4 Ga. App. 360, 1908 Ga. App. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crockett-co-v-garrard-co-gactapp-1908.