Beck & Gregg Hardware Co. v. Southern Surety Co.

ON MOTION ROE REHEARING.

Jenkins, P. J.

It is insisted that the court in its original opinion in this case overlooked the material facts, as shown by the record, that when the case came on for a hearing in the court below the judge of the superior court overruled all the grounds of the defendant’s demurrer, both general and special, except those which raised the question as to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action, which grounds were held good. It is insisted that this amounted to an adjudication that the petition set forth a cause of action, good as against general demurrer, and therefore that the court was not authorized to thereafter dismiss the suit on general demurrer.

It is true, as the plaintiff in error contends, that on the first hearing the court did overrule all the grounds of demurrer except those which' raised the objection that the plaintiff could not maintain the suit, the order of the court providing that “the demurrer be and same is hereby overruled except as to those grounds which refer to the right of the plaintiff to sue on the bond, and the plaintiff having-informed the court that it is relying on a statute of the State in which bond was executed, the plaintiff is allowed ten days to amend petition pleading such statute.” The defendant had demurred to the petition generally on the ground that “the plaintiff’s petition fails to set forth' any cause of action, for the reason that the plaintiff is endeavoring to recover on a bond issued by defendant, Southern Surety Company, in which the Governor of the State of Florida is named as obligee.” The order of the court quoted could not be taken as a judgment overruling this ground of general demurrer; but necessarily was a holding that this particular ground of the general demurrer was good unless the plaintiff could show a right to maintain the suit by pleading a Florida statute.

Upon the filing of the plaintiff’s amendment setting forth the Florida statute dealt with in the original opinion, the defendant demurred generally, to the petition as amended, on the ground that *521“plaintiffs petition fails to sot forth any cause of action, for the reason that plaintiff is endeavoring to recover upon a bond issued by defendant, Southern Surety Company, in which the Governor of the State of Florida- is named as obligee.” The demurrer to the petition as amended contained also numerous other grounds of general and special demurrer, including a special demurrer on the ground that the Florida statute set forth was immaterial and irrelevant. Upon hearing the second demurrer, the court entered an order as follows: “The general demurrer of the defendant to the plaintiff’s petition as amended is hereby sustained and the plaintiff’s petition as amended is hereby dismissed.”

Under the ruling by the Supreme Court in Allen v. Commercial Credit Co., 155 Ga. 545 (117 S. E. 650), the failure of the petition to show a right in the plaintiff to maintain the action was a good ground of general demurrer. See, in this connection, Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Amos, 98 Ga. 533 (25 S. E. 575; Foster v. Sutlive, 110 Ga. 297 (34 S. E. 1037); Dallon City Co. v. Johnson, 57 Ga. 398. Accordingly, the judgment rendered on the second hearing on demurrer, that the general demurrer be sustained and the petition dismissed, must be taken as sustaining all the grounds of general demurrer, including the ground specifically raising the objection that the plaintiff was endeavoring to recover on a bond in which the Governor of Florida was named as obligee.

It is further insisted in the motion for rehearing that the original judgment overruling all the grounds of demurrer except those raising the question as to the right of the plaintiff to sue was not a ruling “adverse” to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff could not, therefore, be held to have acquiesced in any adverse ruling, and the decision by this court in McConnell v. Frank E. Block Co., cited in the original opinion, is without application. In support of this contention the plaintiff points out that the defendant filed exceptions pendente lite to the original order of the court, and it is insisted that the ruling was therefore necessarily “adverse” to the defendant, and not adverse to the plaintiff. It is true that the defendant did file exceptions pendente lite, on which the cross-bill of exceptions was entered in the instant case, it being the contention of the defendant that the petition did not set forth a cause of action, irrespective of whether the plaintiff did or did not have a right to maintain the suit; it is equally true that the first ruling on the *522demurrer was adverse to the plaintiff, since it necessarily held that the petition was subject to the demurrer interposed on the ground that the right to maintain the action was not in the plaintiff, and should be dismissed on that ground unless the defect was cured by the amendment which the plaintiff proposed to offer. Since, as was ruled in the original opinion, the defect was not cured by the amendment offered, the court did not err in sustaining the renewed ground of the general demurrer. Rehearing denied. *524“was an agreement made and entered Into by defendants, clients of said attorney, who induced them while occupying that fiduciary relation, to sign the same without informing defendants of the facts, and said attorneys derived, at defendants’ expense, from the said agreement which defendants were induced to sign, a profit of $500. Defendants further say that they confided in said attorney, which confidence was accepted by said attorney, who fully realized that defendants were depending upon him for competent advice, and that he influenced them to accept and sign this agreement, which, as defendants were due plaintiff nothing, instead of bringing profit to them, resulted solely in profit to the plaintiff and their attorney at the expense of said defendants.” It is further alleged that while the check for $500 issued by the plaintiff was made payable to defendants, “they did not understand the circumstances of the transaction and they were induced to agree before its receipt by said attorney to immediately indorse the same over to him, and that said Clemons gave said check for $500 well knowing at the time that the same was to go to defendants’ counsel and that this payment by him of said sum was the inducing cause of said compromise contract.” It is also alleged that “said attorney was induced by the said payment to reconcile the conflicting interest of said parties rather than to enforce to their full extent their claim of the payment of their entire indebtedness to said Clemons, and that so receiving said sum of $500 from their opponent made it impossible for said attorney to represent defendants interest with that fairness, adequacy, and good faith he was obligated to render to them.” The court sustained a demurrer to the answer of the defendants, and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the amount of the notes sued on, plus interest and attorney’s fees. To this the defendants excepted.