86 Ga. 676 | Ga. | 1891
Jackson brought his action against the Chattanooga, Rome and Carrollton Railroad Company, for damages sustained by him by reason of personal injuries inflicted upon him. by the negligence of the company. This action was brought to the February term, 1889, of Walker superior court. At that term the defendant filed a plea in abatement, alleging, in substance, that the plaintiff should not have and maintain this action, because on the 18th of January, 1889, he began his action against the defendant in a justice’s court in the State of Tennessee, for $200, for injuries to a minor sou, and that on February 20th, 1889, a judgment was rendered against the defendant in said action, and on the 25th of February, 1889, the defendant paid off and discharged the judgment; and that said suit in Tennessee was for the same cause of action set up in this suit. Defendant afterwards amended this plea by allegingthat said suit in Tennessee was still pending. When the case came on for trial at the February term, 1890, in Walker superior court, the plaintiff proposed to amend his declaration by striking out the word “Carrollton” in the name of the company, and inserting in lieu-thereof the word “Columbus,” so that the defendant’s name would read, the “ Chattanooga, Rome and Columbus Railroad Company.” To this the defendant obiected, on the ground that the proposed amendment introduced a new party. The objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted. The defendant objected to going to trial, on the ground that it had just been made a party and that it was then the appearance term. The objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted. The case then went to trial without the intervention of a jury, on the plea in abatement. Upon the trial of the issue made on this plea, the plaintiff' offered the interrogatories of Lewis Shepai’d and John A. Moon,
But it is argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error that when the company dismissed its appeal on the 9th of March, in vacation, and took an order in open court on the 6th of May thereafter, making the dismissal the judgment of the circuit court and affirming the judgment of the justice of the peace, the judgment of the justice’s court became final; and that the court below in the present case erred in not so holding. Counsel for the defendant in error replies to this by showing the subsequent order wherein he dismissed in the circuit court the ease he had brought in the justice’s court and which the railroad company had carried up by appeal. But counsel for the railroad company contend that this order was void and should not have been construed to have any effect, because when the company dismissed its appeal and the judge of the circuit court by his order affirmed the judgment of the justice’s coui’t, there was no case in the circuit court to dismiss. It will be seen, therefore, that the present case, upon this point, turned on the question whether the order of the Tennessee circuit court dismissing the case was void, or was simply an irregularity and erroneous. If it was void, Jackson, the plaintiff, when this case came up in the court below, had already a final judgment of the courts of Tennessee against the defendant, upon the same cause of ac
It was also contended that the order was void because there was no notice given the railroad company of the application for or the granting of the second order. In reply to this it is said in 2 Black Judgments, §912, that “ where in the case of a foreign judgment it does not appear by the record that any notice was given to the party aftected by the action of the court in thus resuming its jurisdiction, it will be presumed that according to the practice of the court, no such notice was necessary, or that if necessary, it was in fact given.”