Knox v. Bates & Co.

Bleckley, Chief Justice,

(after stating the above facts.)

1. The right of action at law upon an open account against a partnership is several against the survivor, not joint against' the survivor and the administrator of the deceased copartner. In equity there is a joint remedy if the partnership be insolvent — certainly so if both the partnership and the survivor be insolvent; and this equitable remedy, where the necessary averments are made, may be administered at law. Anderson vs. Pollard, 62 Ga. 46. But unless the necessary averments are made in the pleadings, the legal remedy alone is involved, and there can be no intendment that the equitable remedy was invoked, or that the conditions of its exercise were established by the evidence. Such averments could be brought in by amendment, but being as to jurisdictional facts, their omission could be supplied after verdict only so far as to heal the jurisdiction as between law and equity; but here there was also defective jurisdiction over the administrator as to the county in which the suit was located, treating the suit as a mere suit at law. Though he could waive this defect so as to affect himself, he could not waive it so as to affect *427others. Suydam vs. Palmer, 63 Ga. 546 ; Rhett vs. Georgia Land Company, 64 Ga. 521. It follows that the judgment is no evidence whatever against the sureties; and on the face of the record before us, it is no evidence even against the administrator, for he did not appear, plead or answer, and was sued at law in Taliaferro county when he was a resident of McDuffie county. He-was subject tobe sued in equity out of his county that is, in the county where his co-defendant, the surviving partner, resided, but not at law; and according to the evidence, he was sued at law, with no equitable element whatsoever in the proceeding. See Pullen vs. Whitfield, 55 Ga. 174.

2. The judgment as one against the survivor was in all respects valid; but he was of Taliaferro county when sued, and, so far as appears, never removed to Wilkes county, or had any property there. The return of nulla Iona as to him is by the sheriff of Wilkes county, and is only that “ I know of no property of defendant Y. T. Smith, in Wilkes county, to levy thisj?. fa. upon.” Such a return might prevent the judgment from becoming dormant. Ellis vs. Atlantic and Gulf Railroad Company, 61 Ga. 362. But how it would prove, or tend to prove, that Y. T-Smith was insolvent, either at the time when the action against him was brought or when the return was made, we do not see. Why should his having no property in Wilkes county of which the sheriff had knowledge, be evidence that he had no property ? To reason from such premises to such a conclusion would be simply absurd; and we may safely say that the reasoning of the law is never absurd.

Judgment reversed.