8 S.E.2d 448 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
1. Where a petition has been filed and a general demurrer thereto is overruled, and on the trial of the issues a nonsuit is granted, the renewing of the identical suit within six months is a new action, except as to limitation. The ruling on demurrer in the first action does not become res judicata as to the second action. To rule otherwise would preclude the defendant from taking exception to the ruling on demurrer in the first case.
2. The petition as amended set out a cause of action for fraud and deceit, and the court erred in sustaining the general demurrer.
The rule that the sustaining of a general demurrer to a petition is a bar to a subsequent suit for the same cause is not applicable to a nonsuit. The party at interest has had an adjudication that his petition failed to set out a cause of action. This ruling unexcepted to becomes final. The Code expressly provides that in case of nonsuit the action may be recommenced within six months, and at that time the plaintiff may have additional evidence to present. Where there is a nonsuit, the case has been determined in the defendant's favor. Suppose he had filed exceptions pendente lite to the order overruling his demurrer; when the case was determined in his favor there was no reason for any further action thereon. He will not be presumed to expect that the plaintiff will renew his suit; and if there is a renewal, the exceptions pendente lite were filed in another action. Therefore, we may say that the action as recommenced or renewed may be the same cause of action, but not the same action so as to require that the adjudication in the first suit is binding in the second or renewed suit. To hold otherwise would encourage litigation.
The petition alleged that the defendant came to the plaintiff in 1930, and told him he was selling stock in the American Marble Company, which he stated was a corporation of Pickens County, Georgia, and that he desired to sell the plaintiff 250 shares of stock in said company at $5 per share. The defendant stated to the plaintiff, that the American Marble Company was a new corporation, worth millions of dollars; that both John D. Rockefeller and Henry Ford were stockholders therein; that it owned its marble quarries in Pickens County, Georgia; and that it was all clear of debts and incumbrances, and was paying more on the investment than was being earned by any farm, sawmill, or bank. The defendant also told plaintiff, if he would buy the stock and became dissatisfied therewith after twelve months from date of purchase, that defendant would take it back from the plaintiff for the price he had given. The plaintiff alleged, that, relying on the truth of the statements made by the defendant "concerning said company, *128 and his promise to take the stock off the plaintiff's hands after twelve months from the date of purchase should plaintiff become dissatisfied with said stock, . . and believing all the statements made by him [plaintiff], then and there purchased from him 250 shares of stock at five dollars per share," and had the certificate issued to him. It was alleged, that the statements made with reference to the company were not true; that the corporation was not chartered in Pickens County, but in Fulton; that neither Rockefeller nor Ford was a stockholder in said company, and that said corporation does not own and has never owned any land in Pickens County, Georgia, and does not own and has never owned any marble quarry clear of liens, and has never earned, declared, or paid, any dividend or profit, and that each of the statements made by Greene with reference to said company were false, made to deceive, and did deceive and damage the plaintiff, who parted with his money relying on the truthfulness of the representations made; that the defendant deceived the plaintiff both as to the truth of his statements and as to his agreement; that the defendant had no intention of carrying out his agreement to repurchase said stock; that at the time of purchase the stock was, and is now, worthless; that the American Marble Company was and is insolvent; and that the defendant had a financial interest in the stock at the time of its sale to him. Further it was alleged that after twelve months the plaintiff became dissatisfied with the stock, took the certificate to the defendant, and demanded that he comply with his agreement to repurchase, but that defendant refused so to do. He now offers to rescind, and says that by the failure and refusal of the defendant to carry out his agreement to repurchase, the defendant has breached his contract and is liable to the plaintiff in the sum of $1250 with interest. He prayed that the defendant be required to receive and accept said stock and pay him therefor $1250; and if for any reason specific performance could not be decreed, he prayed for judgment against the defendant for $1750 as damages for breach of contract. By amendment he struck these prayers, and alleged that "plaintiff waives the contract, and prays for damages, and lays his damage at $1250." The court sustained the general demurrer, and the plaintiff excepted.
The statements alleged to have been made by the defendant to the plaintiff, on which he acted, were not opinions or mere puffing. *129
It is alleged that the defendant stated that this was a corporation which owned valuable marble quarries in Pickens County, Georgia, that there was no incumbrance of any kind thereon, that the corporation owed no debts and was earning dividends, and had as stockholders two of the richest men in America. If the petition had made only these allegations, and had stated that they were false and had been made for the purpose of deceiving, and resulted in damage to the plaintiff, a cause of action would have been stated. Lyle v. Prade,
The facts that the plaintiff may have also relied on the promise of the defendant as to the repurchase in the future, and that this promise was a nudum pactum, will not alter the case. InCastleberry v. Wells,
Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions; cross-billdismissed. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J., concur.