Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Brazzeal

9 S.E.2d 773, 62 Ga. App. 683, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1940
Docket28133.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 773 (Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Brazzeal) 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
Home Owners Loan Corp. v. Brazzeal, 9 S.E.2d 773, 62 Ga. App. 683, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 404 (Ga. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

Guerry, J.

J. J. Brazzeal filed suit in Decatur County against Mrs. T. H. Wilson and the Home Owners Loan Corporation, alleging that the principal office of the corporation was in Fulton County, Georgia, but that it had an agent, J. B. L. Barber, in *685 charge of “all of the real estate owned by said defendant corporation in said [Decatur] county, and the renting, repairing, and selling thereof, and is in charge of the property” causing the injuries alleged, the suit being predicated on alleged negligence of the defendants in failing to keep in repair a building owned by the corporation in Decatur County, which Mrs. Wilson occupied as tenant. On March 2, 1938, the sheriff made an entry of service of the process, as follows: “I have this day served the defendant Home Owners Loan Corporation by serving J. B. L. Barber agent in charge of defendant’s office in Decatur County, Georgia, in person with a copy of the within petition and process.” This suit was returnable to the May term of Decatur superior court. At the May term, 1938,.the corporation filed a traverse and a special plea to the jurisdiction, in which it denied that Barber was its agent authorized to accept service in Decatur County, and alleged that it could not be legally served so as to be made a party respondent. At the same term it also filed demurrers and answers to the petition, subject to the special plea to the jurisdiction. It was prayed that the petition be served on the corporation “by its agent in said county, if found therein; and if such agent be not found within the county, by second original directed to Fulton County, Georgia.” On August 5, 1938, it appearing to the court that the corporation had an office and agent in Fulton County, and that it had traversed the entry of service on Barber, who was alleged to have been its agent in Decatur County, and it appearing in the petition that the plaintiff had prayed for a second original to issue if such agent be not found in Decatur County, the court, on motion of counsel for the plaintiff, passed an order directing that a second original be issued and served on the corporation in Fulton County, Georgia. This was done, and service of the second original was perfected on August 12, 1938. At the November term of the court the corporation again filed the identical answer it had filed at the May term, reserving its rights as to the special plea to the jurisdiction.

In March, 1939, Mrs. Leila G. Brazzeal, the widow of the plaintiff, filed a petition alleging that J. J. Brazzeal died on August 9, 1938, and that she had been appointed administratrix; and she prayed that she be made a party plaintiff. At the May term, 1939, the corporation demurred to this petition and application, on the *686 ground that it appeared from the application that at the time the second original was served on the corporation, August 12, 1938, the plaintiff, J. J. Brazzeal, had died on August 9, 1938; and that such service was ineffectual, because there was no party plaintiff at the time of the'service. This demurrer was overruled, and Mrs. Brazzeal was made a party as prayed. To this order exceptions were taken. We will consider these exceptions first. It appears that the plaintiff had the defendant corporation served by serving its alleged agent in Decatur County. An answer was made, denying that the agent served in Decatur County was in fact its agent authorized to accept service. By reason of this plea an order was taken for a second original to be issued and served on the defendant corporation in Fulton County. This second original was served on August 12, 1938. At the November term, 1938, the defendant, still reserving its rights under its plea to the jurisdiction, filed an answer to the suit as served by the second original, the answer being identical with the answer filed at the preceding May term. The administratrix filed her petition to be made a party, and the defendant, by its demurrer filed at the May term, 1939, contended that no suit was pending against it, because of the fact that at the time of the service of the second original the plaintiff was dead. It will be recalled that there was at that time before the court a service perfected on the alleged agent of the defendant corporation, to which service it had filed its traverse and plea to the jurisdiction on the ground that it was not a resident of Decatur County. The administratrix was entitled to be made a party plaintiff to any action filed by her intestate before his death. Under the Code, § 3-401, she was entitled to be made a party to the suit pending in May, 1938, and to a suit based on any second original issued in such action. The defendant, having filed its answers to every action served on it, whether in Decatur County or Fulton County, and it not appearing that it did not know of the plaintiff’s death, will not now be heard to say that the entire action as to it should be dismissed. In Rountree v. Lathrop, 69 Ga. 539, it was said: “After regular trial in a claim case and verdict finding the property subject, it is too late for the claimant to take advantage of the fact of the death of one of the plaintiffs in fi. fa., occurring before the trial.” In Jernigan v. Carter, 51 Ga. 232, it was held that “a plea that the plaintiff in a suit was dead at the time of the *687 commencement of the action may be filed at any time before judgment, it lemg made to appear that the fact pleaded has just come to the Icnoiuledge of the defendant. (Italics ours.) The defendant, having answered at the November term, was not injured by having the administratrix thereafter made a party. Moreover, it would have been error to dismiss the action; for if Barber was an agent authorized to accept service in Decatur County, as alleged in the petition, the right to make parties could not be questioned. The fact that after a suit is filed the plaintiff dies before service is perfected will not require dismissal of the suit. The right to be made a party inheres in the representative of the deceased. That was what was held in Patrick v. Travelers Insurance Co., 48 Ga. App. 777 (173 S. E. 495). No special issue was made on the plea to the jurisdiction, and under the evidence the first service was good. There was no error in overruling the objection to the making of a party, or in failing to dismiss the action as to the corporation.

The petition alleged that the defendant corporation was the owner of a two-story building in Bainbridge, Georgia, known as the Wilson House, the second floor of which was maintained as a rooming-house for the accommodation of transient guests received and entertained for hire. The corporation rented a part of said building to Mrs. Wilson who operated it as a hotel. The plaintiff was a guest in said hotel on the night of November 11. The guests of the hotel parked their cars in a lot back of the hotel. There was a stairway at the back, which was used by guests in going to and coming from their parked automobiles. The plaintiff used these stairs on the morning of November 12 in going to his car; and when he stepped on the landing of the stairs, which appeared to be all right, it broke through with him, and his leg was broken, and he was caused other injuries, for which he sued. It was alleged that on several occasions before November 12 Mrs. Wilson notified J. B. L.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E.2d 773, 62 Ga. App. 683, 1940 Ga. App. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-loan-corp-v-brazzeal-gactapp-1940.