21 S.E.2d 169 | Ga. | 1942
1. The Code, § 92-7602, declares in part as follows: "Whenever any person, other than the person against whom the same has issued, shall pay any execution issued for State, county, or municipal taxes, the officer whose duty it is to enforce said execution shall, upon the request of the party paying the same, transfer said execution to said party; and said transferee shall have the same rights as to enforcing said execution and priority of payment as might have been exercised or claimed before said transfer." In Beavers v. Interstate Bond Co.,
2. An injunction should not issue on mere apprehension. The petition filed in 1935, and amended in February, 1939, and in November, 1941, when construed most strongly against the plaintiffs, showed a course of dealing between the city and the Bond Company in reference to sale and transfer of tax executions for the years 1932 to 1937, inclusive, through a named individual as local agent of the bond company, which insisted *335
on dealing with the city exclusively through such agent, but that this agency was terminated about March, 1938, after which time no successor or other agent had been appointed, and no further sales or transfers had taken place, or were impending. Krueger v. MacDougald,
3. "He who would have equity must do equity, and give effect to all equitable rights in the other party respecting the subject-matter of the suit." Code, § 37-104. Accordingly, as to that part of the petition which was based upon the theory that title to the executions remained in the city because the amounts received therefor were less than face value, and sought to enjoin enforcement of each of such executions and to cancel the transfer, except as to the difference between the amount which the city actually received therefor and that which it should have received as payment in full, the petition as against the city was fatally defective in that it contained no allegation showing payment or tender of such difference, liability for which the plaintiffs admitted. Mayor c. of Savannah v. Fawcett,
4. Even if the petition may have shown that a cause of action existed in the city's favor for recovery of commissions paid to the bond company or its agents, it alleged no such facts or circumstances as would entitle the plaintiffs as citizens to maintain an action in the city's behalf for such recovery. Code, §§ 3-108, 22-711; Holt v. Fayetteville,
(a) The petition in thus seeking affirmative recovery in the city's behalf is distinguished from a suit to enjoin waste or unlawful expenditure by officers. Compare Aiken v. Armistead,
(b) As to this phase, the case also differs from Richter v. Savannah, *336
5. "Equity cases shall be tried in the county where a defendant resides against whom substantial relief is prayed." Constitution, art. 6, sec. 16, par. 3 (Code, §§ 2-4303, 3-202).
(a) Under the foregoing rulings, the petition did not state a cause of action against the City of Macon; nor did it show ground for equitable relief as against other resident of Bibb County, unless it should be held otherwise as to the city marshal and the clerk of the superior court. As to these officers, however, the relief prayed could not be more than "merely incidental" to that which was prayed for as against the city and the bond company, so that they should be treated as mere nominal parties in determining venue. Herrington v. Bryan,
(b) Under the allegations of the petition, the Bond Company as transferee was the only defendant against whom substantial equitable relief was prayed, in the sense of the foregoing provision of the constitution, and since it appeared that this defendant resided in Fulton County, the superior court of Bibb County did not have jurisdiction. The court properly sustained the general demurrers relating to the merits as to resident defendants, and properly dismissed the action as to the bond company, in response to its demurrer so far as related to the question of jurisdiction. See, in this connection, Interstate Bond Co. v. Lee,
6. In ruling that the petition as finally amended was defective and subject to demurrer for reasons indicated, no intimation is intended as to whether it may have been subject to other grounds of demurrer, general or special.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justicesconcur.