188 Ga. 434 | Ga. | 1939
J. G. Burns filed suit in Carroll County superior court against W. P. Cumbie, a resident of Carroll County, and H. D. Bradley, a resident of Pulton County. The petition as finally amended alleged, in substance, that on August 26, 1935, H. D. Bradley executed and delivered to W. W. Richardson a bond for title obligating Bradley, upon the payment of $209.63 to convey to Richardson certain land in Carroll County described in the petition; that on January 27, 1936, Richardson for a valuable consideration transferred and assigned the bond for title to J. G. Burns; that defendant Cumbie as tenant of defendant Bradley is in possession of the land involved, and is paying the rents to Bradley; that plaintiff is entitled to the rents on the property since
"“Equity cases shall be tried in the county where a defendant resides against whom substantial relief is prayed.” Constitution of Georgia, art. 6, sec. 16, par. 3 (Code, § 2-4303). This is mandatory, and can not be altered by legislative enactment or any rule of construction. By this provision every suit in equity must be brought in the county where a defendant against whom substantial relief is prayed resides. In the instant case the petition alleges that Bradley is a resident of Fulton County, and by such an allegation it is shown that he is not a resident of Carroll County where this suit was brought. Cumbie is a resident of Carroll County; but in order to authorize the plaintiff to bring this suit in that county it must appear that some substantial relief is prayed against this defendant. The petition shows that Cumbie is merely a tenant of Bradley, claiming no title to or interest in the land involved in this suit, and the only relief prayed against him is that he pay rents to a receiver, attorn to the plaintiff as the owner of the premises, and surrender possession. These allegations are insufficient to meet the requirements of the constitutional provision. It was held in Ellis v. Farmer, 119 Ga. 238 (46 S. E. 105), that where a suit was against a certain person and one holding as his tenant, to have title to the land decreed to be in plaintiff, to recover mesne profits, and to have certain notes held by the main defendant delivered up and canceled, the tenant was not a substantial defendant as contemplated by the constitutional provision. Having seen that Cum
By amendment the plaintiff struck his prayer for injunction, and prayed for possession of the premises involved; but this did not have the effect of making the suit one respecting title to land, required to be- tried in the county where the land lies, as provided in art. 6, sec. 16, paragraph 2, of the constitution (Code, § 2-4302). Clayton v. Stetson, 101 Ga. 634, 640 (28 S. E. 983); Hix v. Kiser, 103 Ga. 738 (30 S. E. 583); Vizard v. Moody, 115 Ga. 491 (41 S. E. 997); Brown v. Martin, 137 Ga. 338 (73 S. E. 495, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 16); Chosewood v. Jones, 146 Ga. 804 (92 S. E. 646); Cochran v. Groover, 156 Ga. 323 (118 S. E. 865); Hutchins v. Merritt, 165 Ga. 650 (141 S. E. 652). In Clayton v. Stetson, supra, it was said: "The plaintiff relied, in the present case, upon a legal title which1 could be asserted in an ordinary common-law proceeding only upon an adjustment of the equities between her and the defendant. The adjustment of such equities being a preliminary indispensable to the prosecution of the action as a common-law suit to recover land, and it appearing from the petition itself that the plaintiff has not reinvested herself with the title through the medium of appropriate proceedings upon equitable principles, and the defendant confessedly not residing in the same county in which the land lies, it follows that the court did not err in dismissing the declaration, first, for the reason that the plaintiff showed title out of herself; and second, for the reason that, as against the defendant, no equitable relief which would reinvest her with the title could be granted against the defendant in the county in which the suit was instituted. We are thus led to the conclusion that the court properly dismissed on demurrer the plaintiff’s ae
There are a number of other grounds of general and special demurrer, on which error is assigned. In view of the fact that the judgment is reversed, ordinarily a ruling would be made on these grounds; but since the petition will be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, it can not be tried again, and thus a ruling on other grounds of demurrer is unnecessary.
Judgment reversed.