180 Ga. 97 | Ga. | 1935
The Court of Appeals certified the following question: “Where a plaintiff brought an action in H. County jointly against H. County and N., a person residing in a different county of this State, to recover damages for personal injuries arising out of an automobile accident which occurred on May 29, 1930, near a bridge on a public road in H. County while plaintiff was riding in an automobile driven by N., and said suit was duly served on H. County on May 26, 1931, and duly served oh N. by ‘second original’ on May 25, 1931, and the two defendants filed separate demurrers to the petition, both of which were overruled by the trial judge, and on writ of error the Court of Appeals (46 Ga. App. 363, 167 S. E. 748), on February 8, 1933, reversed the trial court’s judgment on the county’s demurrer, because the petition ‘failed to allege that the injuries were caused by a defective condition of a bridge,’ and at the same time held: ‘Since the petition set out no cause of action against the county, and since it appears from the petition that the other defendant, the operator of. the automobile, was a non-resident of the county, living in this State, the court had no jurisdiction as to him, and it was error to overrule his demurrer to the petition, which was upon the ground that the court had no jurisdiction as to him’ (thus passing upon the merits of the case alleged against the county, but merely holding that the trial court had no jurisdiction as to N.); and after the remittitur of the Court of Appeals went to the trial court the petition was amended, the demurrer was renewed, and the presiding judge sustained the demurrer and dismissed the case; and on June 23, 1933, within six months after the decision of the Court of Appeals and the subsequent dismissal of the case by the trial court, but not within two years after the right of action accrued (Civil Code (1910), § 4497), the same plaintiff filed the same cause of action against N. alone, in a county which had jurisdiction of both N. and the subject-matter: Under the facts stated, did the Civil Code (1910), § 4381, so toll the statute of limitations as to'allow the plaintiff to renew the original action?”
In Cox v. Berry, 13 Ga. 306, before the Code of 1863, this court had under consideration the act of 1847, and in that decision it was said: “We are not held to a narrow and technical construction of tliis act, but are bound to give effect to the manifest intention of the legislature. It gives relief in any case which may be brought in any of the courts of the State. That is, in all instances where the plaintiff is, in the exercise of a proper diligence, attempting by judicial proceeding to assert his right and enforce his remedy. The legislature meant to say that the dismissal, discontinuance, or nonsuit of any proceeding which has for its object the assertion of a right should not prejudice that right so far as the statute of limitations is concerned, if that proceeding is renewed in the same or in any other form within six months. If we consider the mischief, we must extend the construction of the remedy thus far, else the mischief is not covered by it. The act is remedial, and is to be literally construed.” From the whole decision it is apparent that the word “literally” was a typographical error, and that the word “liberally” was intended. Some twenty years following the adoption of the Code of 1863, and after noting the verbal changes made in codification, tliis court in Rountree v. Key, 71 Ga. 214, had the following to say touching the law here under construction: “An examination of the rulings of this court on the act of 1847, substantially re-enacted on this point by the act of 1856 — Acts of 1856, p. 237, convinces us that this court has gone great lengths in permitting the renewal of suits within six months, so as not to be barred, if the original suit was not barred, so as to extend the pro
But it is contended that section 4381 refers to the “privilege of dismissal and renewal,” and that the word “privilege” could not apply to an involuntary dismissal. There is some force in this contention; but, even considering the additional change, we Can not say that a legislative intention to amend the existing law manifestly appears. We conclude that, so far as a dismissal is concerned, it
In view of what has been said, it is our opinion that the statement in the Code should be considered as a mere condensation of the specific enactments, that the change in verbiage was the result of inadvertence or oversight on the part of the legislature, and that the original law is the criterion of the right of renewal. Cf. Bailey v. McAlpin, 122 Ga. 616 (6) (50 S. E. 388). Even if the codifiers undertook to amend the law, it does not necessarily follow that the legislature intended to sanction their effort to do so. The proposed
Counsel for the defendant advance the argument that it was the purpose of the codifiers to reconcile the law as to renewal in six months with section 5625 of the Code of 1910, as to recommencement on payment of costs. A sufficient answer to this contention will be found in the Rountree case, supra. The decision in Ternest v. Georgia, Coast Railway Co., 19 Ga. App. 94 (90 S. E. 1040), appears to have misconstrued the decision in Kimbro v. Virginia &c. Railway Co., supra, and is not approved so far as it may be contrary to what is now ruled. The decision in Greenfield v. Farrell Co., 17 Ga. App. 637 (87 S. E. 912), contains, however, a correct statement of the law upon the question here under consideration.
In the foregoing we have referred to the acts of 1847 and 1856 as if their provisions were contained in a single statute, or were interchangeable. In Cox v. Strickland, supra, it was said by Judge Lamar that the two were substantially the same, except that the act of 1856 “added the privilege to renew in case judgment for the plaintiff was arrested.” In the present case we are not concerned with any question as to whether the former statute was superseded by the latter, or whether both should be considered. The reasoning here applied would be the same under either statute; and therefore we have referred to both, and have made no distinction between them. Under the facts stated in the question, the provisions of the Civil Code (1910), § 4381, as properly construed, would so toll the statute of limitations as to allow the plaintiff to renew the original action.