1. In a suit against one who signed a promissory note as an apparent comaker and which included a waiver by all parties to the note, “whether principal, security, guarantor, endorser or other party,” of “demand, protest and notice of demand, protest and nonpayment and defenses by reason of any extension of time of its payment that may be given by the holder ... to them or any of them,” it was not error to strike a defensive plea in which the defendant, one of the apparent makers, contended that he, being a surety, was released by an extension of time granted to another for payment.
Mansour v. Fulton Nat. Bank of Atlanta,
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It must appear from the allegations of the petition that the payee in a note representing a transaction under the Industrial Loan Act was duly licensed to operate thereunder when the obligation was incurred, i.e., when the note was executed.
Robinson v. Colonial Discount Co.,
As a condition precedent to recovery upon an obligation incurred under the provisions of the Industrial Loan Act it must appear that the obligee was licensed under the Act to engage in the business of making loans, etc., thereunder.
Jobson v. Masters,
Where there was no allegation in the petition that the obligee in the note sued upon was duly licensed at the time the obligation was incurred and there was no proof of that fact before the court, it was error to enter what amounted to a default judgment after striking the defenses referred to in Headnote 1 and then striking the remainder of the answer as being nothing more than a plea of general issue against an unconditional contract in writing to pay. While a plea of general issue is not available against an unconditional contract in writing to pay
(Richey v. Johnson,
While there was no demurrer to the petition upon the ground that it failed to allege this necessary fact, and no general demurrer was filed to the action, the striking of all defensive pleadings and entering of a judgment did not cure the defect in the petition. “[W]here there is a default judgment, 'nothing can be presumed but what appears in the declaration.’ Hemmenway v. Hickes, [Mass.]
“A defendant who passes over, without demurring, a.petition which is fatally defective in that it does not set forth a cause of action may still attack the same on this ground ... by assigning error on the judgment by a direct writ of error sued out in time. . .”
Kelly v. Strouse,
Consequently, this error, being properly raised upon appeal, requires a reversal. We do not deal with a situation in which the necessary fact of license was properly alleged and admitted, either expressly or by failure of the defendant to deny it. Nor do we deal with the ordinary situation when the defect, being amendable, is not one upon which the plaintiff’s right to enforce the obligation is conditional. Generally, amendable defects are cured by the judgment unless there is an actual want of a cause of action.
Rollins v. Personal Finance Co.,
Judgment reversed.
