Mathis v. Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service

160 S.E.2d 855, 117 Ga. App. 399, 1968 Ga. App. LEXIS 1103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 14, 1968
Docket43196
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 S.E.2d 855 (Mathis v. Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service) 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
Mathis v. Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, 160 S.E.2d 855, 117 Ga. App. 399, 1968 Ga. App. LEXIS 1103 (Ga. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Whitman, Judge.

This is an appeal by Franklin L. Mathis, plaintiff in the court below, from a judgment entered on August 1, 1967, granting a motion for summary judgment “in favor of Lee Roy Kimbrell, Willis Kimbrell and Raymond Kennedy as partners, doing business as Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service,” the notice of appeal designating judgment appealed from as “from the order of the superior court entered on the 1st day of August, 1967, granting its motion for summary judgment against plaintiff and in favor of defendant, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service.”

The case originated by the filing in the lower court of a petition by Mathis as plaintiff against one J. D. Kimbrell and Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, as defendants, alleging defendant J. D. Kimbrell to be a resident of Marshall, Arkansas, and in Paragraph 2 of his petition alleging the defendant, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service to be a corporation existing under the laws of the State of Texas. The petition alleged that the defendants were nonresident motorists within the terms of the Motor Vehicle Act and it was necessary that they be served by serving the Secretary of State of Georgia. It was a suit for damages for alleged personal injuries and property damage claimed to have resulted from the operation by defendant J. D. Kimbrell, who was alleged to have been negligent in the operation of a tractor-trailer, which acts of negligence it is *400 alleged “were acts for which both of the named defendants are liable and they are the direct and proximate cause of the in-injuries and pain and suffering sued for.”

During the pendency of the case in the court below a default judgment as to liability was rendered against the individual defendant J. D. Kimbrell, which is in no wise involved in the appeal before this court.

By order of the trial court dated February 23, 1966, agreed to by plaintiff, the defendant Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, was granted thirty additional days within which to file defensive pleadings, the order providing that nothing therein should be construed as submitting said defendant to the jurisdiction of the court.

On March 24, 1966, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service alleging itself to be “a partnership composed of Lee Roy Kimbrell, Willis Kimbrell and Raymond Kennedy, all of Houston, Texas,” filed an unverified plea to the jurisdiction, and on the same date filed separate demurrer and answer without waiving its demurrer and plea to the jurisdiction; the demurrer referring to Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service as a partnership, and the answer of defendant Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service denying Paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s petition and alleging it to be “a partnership ■ composed of Lee Roy Kimbrell, Willis Kimbrell and Raymond Kennedy, all of Houston, Texas.”

Thereafter on March 30, 1966, without having amended its plea to the jurisdiction theretofore filed on March 24, 1966, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, a partnership composed of the three named partners, filed its verified plea to the jurisdiction.

On April 18, 1967, the trial court entered an order reciting “the court after hearing argument of counsel on the plea to the jurisdiction, general demurrer and other defensive pleadings, determines to reserve final ruling’-’ thereon, “in order to allow plaintiff’s counsel to initiate discovery proceedings,” and by said order adjudged and directed that the plaintiff initiate discovery proceedings by interrogatories on or before April 28, 1967. On that date counsel for plaintiff filed written interrogatories directed “to Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, defendants,” and on May 15, 1967, response was filed to said interrogatories as “answers of defendant, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Company.” To interrogatories as to whether or not Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service is a corporation or partnership, and if either, inquiry- as to the names of the owners or any persons having *401 any financial interest, the answers of Kimbrell Bros. Tire Company responded that Kimbrell Bros. Tire Company is a partnership composed of Lee Roy Kimbrell, Willis Kimbrell and Raymond Kennedy, all of Houston, Texas.

On July 18, 1967, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Co. filed a motion entitled “Motion to dismiss petition” in two sections, A and B, consisting of six numbered paragraphs, each paragraph 6 alleging “this defendant relies on and cites in support of its motion the petition of the plaintiff, the demurrers, the plea and answer of this defendant, the interrogatories of the plaintiff and response of this defendant thereto all previously filed in this court.” There is also attached to the motion as Exhibits A and B a copy of the interrogatories and responses thereto and affidavit of one Lee Roy Kimbrell, “a partner of this defendant.” The motion prayed that it be sustained and the plaintiff’s petition be dismissed. On this motion an order was issued of date July 18, 1967, requiring the plaintiff to show cause on the 1st day of August, 1967, at 2 p.m. why the motion to dismiss should not be sustained and judgment entered as prayed therein, said order also providing that a copy of the motion and of the order be served on the plaintiff instanter.

There are three questions involved on this appeal. First, the nature of the motion to dismiss; second, the timeliness of hearing on the motion; and, third, whether the individual defendant J. D. Kimbrell was the agent of the partnership, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service or Kimbrell Bros. Tire Company, as the case may be, or an independent contractor.

Before entering upon a discussion of these questions we deal preliminarily with the nature of the defendant Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service. The plaintiff sued the Tire Service as a Texas corporation. There were no pleadings by Tire Service as a corporation. The record shows there was no such corporation. The defensive pleadings were filed by or on behalf of Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service, or as otherwise stated, Kimbrell Bros. Tire Company, a partnership composed of J. D. Kimbrell, Willis Kimbrell and Raymond Kennedy, and summary judgment was granted in favor of the three named partners as such of Kimbrell Bros. Tire Service. No question has been raised by any of the parties in respect to the variance between the characterization of one of the defendants as a corporation and as a partnership, or in respect to the variance in the partnership names, and no question in respect to variances is adjudicated *402 by this opinion. Moreover, in view of the fact that plaintiff’s petition was amendable and he did not amend his petition changing it from a suit against a corporation to that of a partnership insofar as the partnership is concerned, these variances are not regarded as material here. See Bell v. Ayers, 82 Ga. App. 92 (60 SE2d 523); Parker v. Kilgo, 109 Ga. App. 698 (2), 701 (137 SE2d 333). See also Chambers v. Williams Bros. Lumber Co., 80 Ga. App. 38 (2) (55 SE2d 244); Tuggle v. Waller, 91 Ga. App. 721, 723 (87 SE2d 123).

1. The lower court correctly regarded the “Motion to dismiss” as a motion for summary judgment. It raised the question of the relationship between J. D.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.E.2d 855, 117 Ga. App. 399, 1968 Ga. App. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-kimbrell-bros-tire-service-gactapp-1968.