1-. Suit was brought by Grant against English, Murphy, James, and the executors and executrix of Joseph E. Brown, upon a joint bond; and after verdict and judgment for the plaintiff against all the defendants except James, the executors and executrix of Brown filed their bill of exceptions, in which they excepted to the verdict and judgment, on the ground that James had not been served with process and no excuse or reason for not serving him had been shown, and no verdict and judgment should have been had against any of the defendants, on account of such non-joinder. No plea in abatement for the non-joinder of James was filed, nor was any motion piade to dismiss the action because he was not served. Very clearly the defense of non-joinder should have been presented to the court prior to the verdict, and can not be available after verdict. Beasley v. Allan, 23 Ga. 600; Jennings v. Wright & Co., 54 Ga. 537; Merritt v. Bagwell, 70 Ga. 578.
2. By the terms of the bond given to Grant by Brown, Murphy, English and James, as principals, and Morrill as surety, they obligated themselves to procure the release of Grant from the bond which Penitentiary Co. No. 3, as principal, and Alexander, Grant and others, as sureties, had previously given to the State, and, if that could not be done, “to save him harmless on account of that bond.” They did not procure his release. When the executions for the unpaid hire of the convicts for the years 1894 and 1895 were issued by the comptroller-general, in favor of the State against Penitentiary Co. No. 3, as principal, and Alexander, Grant and others, as sureties, and the State was proceeding, as it had the legal right to do, to make the full amount of such executions out of Grant, by having his property levied upon, and he was thereby forced to pay off such executions, the sums so paid were damages which Grant had lawfully sustained by reason of his having signed the bond to the State, and Brown, Murphy, English
3. The plea that said executions, levied upon Grant’s property, were void, because issued against Thomas Alexander and William W. Simpson after their deaths, is disposed of by the decision of this court in Brown v. Barnes, 99 Ga. 1.
4. Under the act of 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 56), when a defendant desires to plead, he must answer each averment of fact which is distinctly and plainly made in the petition, by doing one of three things: (1) either deny the averment, (2 ) admit the averment, or (3) state that he can neither admit nor deny the averment, because of the want of sufficient information. The averment is to be treated as fully proved if the plea does not reply to it or deny it in the manner pointed out by the act. Pleas which merely allege that the defendants “do not know,” or that they “do not of their own knowledge know,” whether or not certain averments of the plaintiff’s petition are true, do not, under our statute, constitute a sufficient denial of such averments. The plea should contain the result of a fair and reasonable search for information: If such search leaves the mind in doubt of the truth or falsity of the averment, this doubt may be, ordinarily, pleaded, coupled with the assertion of ignorance upon the defendant’s part. Moreover, in the case at bar, the defendants who filed, the pleas stricken on demurrer were the representatives of an estate, and their personal knowledge was not involved. Certainly
5. The court having rightly stricken the pleas of the defendants, for the reason that they presented no issues for determination by the jury, it was proper to treat the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition as true, and, so doing, there was no error in directing a verdict in his favor.
Judgment affirmed.