J. Ben. Wilson & Co. v. Sprague Mowing Machine Co.

55 Ga. 672
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 Ga. 672 (J. Ben. Wilson & Co. v. Sprague Mowing Machine Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Ben. Wilson & Co. v. Sprague Mowing Machine Co., 55 Ga. 672 (Ga. 1876).

Opinion

Jackson, Judge.

This suit is in the statutory form. The object of that statute, when first enacted, was to simplify pleading. Under it the Sprague Mowing Machine Company alleges that the defendants owe them on an account. The bill of particulars is annexed. No plea or demurrer or other defense was made. Judgment was rendered by the court for principal and interest on the account. A motion was made to arrest it. The court below overruled that motion, and this is the error complained of.

1. The gravamen of the motion is that nobody sues; there is no plaintiff, the Sprague Mowing Machine Company neither alleging that it is a partnership and setting out the names of the partners, nor that it is a corporation, and stating where chartered and by what authority it was here. It is said it shows on the declaration that it is neither a natural nor an artificial person, and therefore that no person sues, and the declaration is fatally defective. The declaration may be defective; but the authorities, at least such as we have examined, are to the effect that it is good. The cases of Harris vs. The Murkingen Manufacturing Company, 4 Blackford, 267; Richardson vs. St. Joseph Iron Company, 5 Blackford, 146; Hearton vs. The Cincinnati and Fort Wayne Railroad Company, 16 Indiana, 275; and the Bennington Iron Company vs. John Rutherford, Jr., 3 Har., 105-158, decide that [674]*674it is not necessary to aver that the plaintiff is a corporation. In the case last cited, from New Jersey, the court ruled that it is unnecessary even in the case of a foreign corporation; that a natural interpretation is to be given to pleading when it is susceptible of it, and that the name of the plaintiff imports that it is a corporation. And the judge delivering the opinion says that the plea of “nul tiel corporation” is the remedy of the defendant if he denies the existence of the corporation.

2. If, then, it is not necessary to aver that the plaintiff is a corporation, it follows that the motion to arrest the judgment is not good. Even if defective, it is amendable. Besides, it was right that judgment should go by default on this account, there being no plea or answer filed: Code, section 3457.

Judgment affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Ga. 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-ben-wilson-co-v-sprague-mowing-machine-co-ga-1876.