56 Ga. App. 443 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
In March, 1935, J. N. Butler filed suit against Hense Winton, C. N. Ragsdale, J. R. Lawhon, and Gus Weill, as joint tort-feasors, returnable to the June term, 1935, of the city court of Thomasville. Ragsdale, Lawhon, and Weill jointly filed a plea to the jurisdiction, a demurrer, and an answer. In June, 1935, Winton filed a motion to vacate and quash the entry of service on him, a plea to the jurisdiction, a demurrer, and an answer. . The demurrer (omitting grounds of special demurrer) was as follows: “Now comes the defendánt, Hense Winton, and subject to his special appearance and motion to vacate and quash the entry of service, and subject to his plea and objections to the jurisdiction of this court, and not waiving the same but insisting thereon, demurs to the petition of the plaintiff, upon the following grounds: 1. Because, under the allegations of the petition,
The plaintiff filed and urged a motion to strike and dismiss the motion to vacate and quash the entry of service and plea to the jurisdiction, "on the grounds that said defendant had waived same and had acknowledged and waived jurisdiction of the court over him by hearing and urging his said demurrer, and having same disposed of in part by consent, before urging and insisting on hearing his said plea to the jurisdiction.” On the hearing of this motion the plaintiff introduced the demurrer of the defendant, and the order thereon, as follows: "The first paragraph of demurrer on question of jurisdiction as to Hense Winton is hereby overruled by consent of attorneys for Hense Winton.” The plaintiff introduced also the demurrers of Bagsdale, Lawhon, and Weill, and the order sustaining them in part, as follows: "This demurrer and the demurrer to the original petition having come on for hearing before me at this time, after hearing argument of counsel, it is ordered that the grounds of demurrer raising the question of the jurisdiction as to the defendants, Eagsdale, Law-hon, and Weill, .are hereby sustained, and the case is dismissed as to said defendants. The other grounds of demurrer and the questions raised thereby are not now passed upon.” The plaintiff introduced also the bill of exceptions to this order and judgment, and the remittitur from the Court of Appeals reversing that judgement. C. E. Hay, attorney for the plaintiff, "thereupon stated in his place as such, that, when this case was reached on September 10, 1935, the only thing said about the proper order for disposing of the several issues then raised by the pleadings was a remark by the trial judge, made in all fairness to all parties and
Judgment affirmed.