(After stating the facts.)
1. Irrespective of whether the assignment of error to the final’ judgment is sufficiently specific or not, there is an exception to the final judgment, and error is duly assigned, through the exceptions pendente lite, to a controlling interlocutory ruling; therefore, under -the decision in Lyndon v. Ga. Ry. & Elec. Co., 129 Ga. 353, 58 S. E. 1047, the writ of error will not be dismissed.
2. It is the right of a defendant to appear specially before pleading to the merits, an,d, have the action dismissed on the ground that there has been no legal service of process. If lack of proper service appears on the. face of the record, advantage of this defect may be taken by motion or any other appropriate procedure, either before or after judgment, provided the defendant by his conduct has done nothing to waive service. Hobby v. Bunch, 83 Ga. 1 (5). When the record shows a valid return of service, and it is necessary to resort to extrinsic testimony to show that there has been no service, or that the service was for any reason invalid, the-objection can be made only by plea in abatement (if before judgment), and in connection therewith the sheriff’s return must be duly traversed. 19 Am. & Eng. Enc. Pl. & Pr. 707; Civil Code, § 4988; Livingston v. Marshall, 82 Ga. 3. Being a dilatory plea, *817it must be filed at the first term, at least at the first term after notice, and must be sworn to. Civil Code, §§ 4988, 5049, 5058. Unless duly traversed, the return of the sheriff is conclusive. If the return is made by a deputy sheriff, both the sheriff and the deputy sheriff must be made parties to the traverse. We are not able to cite any Georgia decision in support of the proposition that the sheriff must be made party when the return of the deputy is traversed; for, so far as our investigation has disclosed, this point has never been made previously. However, the reason of the rule seems to demand that the sheriff be made a party. The rule that the officer is a necessary party to the traverse had been previously announced in several eases, but in O’Bryan v. Calhoun, 68 Ga. 218, Speer, J., states the reason as follows: “He and his securities on his bond have a vital interest in the question thus made, and they should have an opportunity to be heard on the issue the defendant has made.” It may be noted, too, that in Elder v. Cozart, 59 Ga. 199, the alleged service was made by a deputy, but it is spoken of as the sheriff’s act, in regard to the necessity for a traverse. By sections 4372 and 4379 of the Civil Code, the sheriff and the sureties on his bond are primarily liable for the misconduct of his deputy, although a concurrent liability may exist against the deputy and his bondsmen. Therefore, when the rer turn is by the deputy sheriff, both he and the sheriff are necessary parties to the traverse.
3. The plea to the jurisdiction is likewise defective in that it is not verified. Civil Code, § 5083.
4. For these formal reasons the demurrer to the special appearance should have been sustained. We also think that the general demurrer to it was well taken. “There are many years and manifold changes in economic conditions between the old rule, which denied the right to sue a foreign corporation in personam outside the jurisdiction of its creation, and the modern doctrine, that the question of jurisdiction' and suability is not so much one of citizenship as one of finding. . . The true test of jurisdiction is not residence or non-residence of the plaintiff, or the place where the cause of action originated, but whether the defendant can be found and served in the jurisdiction where the cause of action is. asserted. A corporation can be found in any jurisdiction where it transacts business through agents located in that jurisdiction, if *818the laws of the same provide a method of perfecting service on it by serving its agents. From 1845 to the present time the law of Georgia has provided that service of process necessary to the commencement of ‘any suit against any corporation in any court/ with certain exceptions which are not material to this discussion, may be' perfected by serving any officer or agent of such corporation, oír by leaving a copy of the process at the place of transacting the usual and ordinary business of such corporation, if such place shall then be within the jurisdiction of the State in which the suit is commenced. Civil Code, §1899. The language of this section is sufficiently broad to authorize the service of process in a suit against a foreign corporation that has a place of doing business in this State. . . A corporation is not always present where its officers are, but it is present in any place where’ its officers or agents transact business in behalf of the corporation under authority conferred by it. . . At common law service upon a corporation could be perfected only by serving its head officer, but whether service upon any officer would be sufficient to bring the corporation into court is a matter to be determined by municipal law.' The law of this State permits its own corporations to be brought into court by serving any officer or agent transacting the business of the corporation, and the statute is broad enough to allow service upon a foreign corporation in tile same way. The State of Georgia either expressly grants to these foreign corporations the right to do business within its limits, or tacitly permits them to transact business here. They are allowed to open offices in this State and here deal with our citizens and others who may he temporarily within its limits. The State protects them in the property which they hold. The courts of Georgia are open to them for the enforcement of any claim of any character which they may have against her citizens or citizens of other 'States passing through this State, subject only to the qualification above referred to. Can it be said that it is a hard rule, or a violation of any sound principle, that.they should be put upon the same footing as regards causes of action against them as that on which our own corporations are placed by the law of the land ?” Reeves v. Southern Ry. Co., 121 Ga. 561. In the case of Denver & Rio Grande R. Co. v. Roller, 100 Fed. 738, 49 L. R. A. 17, the service was perfected-under the California statute upon a soliciting agent who-*819maintained an office and performed, for the non-resident defendant company, services substantially similar to and in no wise broader than those performed by the agent in this case. The court in sustaining the service says: “The object of the service is attained when the agent served is, of sufficient rank and eháracter as to make it" reasonably certain that the corporation will be notified of-the service, and the statute is complied with if he be a managing or business agent in any specified line of business transacted by the corporation in the State where the service is made. That Shotwell, upon.whom the service was.macle, was such an agent is manifest from the facts above stated.” ' A similar ruling as to a similar agent was made in the case of Tuchband v. Chicago & Alton R. Co., 115 N. Y. 437. In the case of Green v. C. B. & Q. Ry. Co. (decided April 29, 1907), 205 U. S. 530, the Supreme Court of the United States decided: “While in a case of diverse citizenship the suit may be brought in the Circuit Court for the district of the residence of either party, there must be service within the district; and if the defendant is a non-resident corporation, service can only be. made'upon it if it is doing business in that district‘in such a manner, and to such an extent, as .to warrant the inference' that it is present there through its agent. A railroad company which has-no tracks within the district is not doing business therein in the sense that, liability for service is incurred because it hires an office and employs an agent for the merely incidental business of solicitation of freight and passenger traffic.” By way of distinguishing that ease from the Boiler case and the Tuchband case, cited supra, the court says: “The question here is whether service upon the agent was. sufficient, and one element of its sufficiency is whether the facts show that the. defendant corporation was, doing business within the district.' It is obvious that the defendant was doing.there a considerable business of a certain kind, although there was no carriage, of freight or passengers. In support of his contention that the defendant was doing business within the district in such a sense that it was liable to service there, the plaintiff cites Denver &c. R. Co. v. Roller, 100 Fed. 738, and Tuchband v. Chicago &c. R. R., 115 N. Y. 437. The facts in those cases were similar to those in the pres-case. But in both cases the actions were brought in the State courts, and the question was of the interpretation of a State *820statute, and the jurisdiction of the State courts.” This language connotes the idea that certain modes of service may be sufficient to give jurisdiction for State purposes and not for Federal purposes. It may be'that the service in this case is of such a nature that'if, upon a judgment rendered by virtue of it, suit should be brought in a sister State, the full faith and credit clause of the Federal constitution would not compel recognition of its validity; yet such a judgment is as enforceable as any other judgment may be in the courts of this State. That a judgment may have such attributes, see the case of Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S. 562.
"We are satisfied that the legislature of this State intended that service upon an agent bearing such relation to a corporation as Knight does to the defendant in this case should be sufficient under the broad language of §1899 of the Civil Code: “Service of all subpoenas, writs and attachments, and other process necessary to the commencement of any suit against any corporation in any court, except as hereinafter provided, may be perfected by serving-any officer or agent of such corporation, or by leaving the same at the place of transacting the usual and ordinary public business of such corporation, if any such place of business then shall be within the jurisdiction of the court in which said suit may be commenced. The officer shall specify the mode of service in his return.” To this legislative intent it is our duty to give effect, and we will let the Federal question take cafe of itself. See Southern Bell Tel. Co. v. Parker, 119 Ga. 727.
’ It was the privilege of the defendant to file demurrer, thereby pleading to the merits, without waiving the right to object to the service, upon expressly stating, as it did, that it was filed subject to the action of the court upon the preliminary question. High v. Padrosa, 119 Ga. 648; Medical College of Georgia v. Rushing, 124 Ga. 239 (3). Such an appearance, if the defendant had been successful in its effort to dismiss the action through the special appearance, would not have conferred jurisdiction upon the court, and would not have amounted to a waiver of process.
Judgment reversed.