59 Ga. App. 651 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Loy Collins brought suit against G. E. Kemp and Tom Lambert, a partnership trading as Lambert Motor Company, Dalton Finance Company, a corporation, and Sentinel Fire Insurance Company. The petition was in two counts. The first count alleged that the motor company was engaged in the business of selling automobiles, and in order to finance and insure the cars which it sold created the Dalton Finance Company, in which Lambert and Kemp were officers and owners of a majority of the stock, and operated the company for the purpose of financing their own sales and of collecting carrying charges and insurance which they wrote on a contract with the insurance company; that the business of the three defendants was handled mainly by Kemp who collected the carrying charges and the insurance on a car purchased by the plaintiff from Lambert Motor Company for $375; that in buying the car he exchanged another car for $250, paid the sum of $100, and agreed to pay $...... per month insurance and carrying charges, which charges were added into his contract and collected by Kemp under an agreement with the insurance company; that on January 10, 1938, the car was totally destroyed by fire; that its actual value was $375, and that the policy of insurance was in full force and effect at the time. In the fifth paragraph of the first count of the petition it was alleged that the plaintiff furnished notice of proof of loss to Kemp and Lambert, and to Mr. Farmer, the adjuster for the insurance company, and thereafter, in March, 1938, the adjuster for the insurance company agreed to pay said loss and to make the voucher payable to the motor company and the plaintiff. It was further alleged in count one that the insurance company had failed to pay the plaintiff any amount, but he is advised and believes and charges that the insurance company has paid the finance company and the motor company “some amount on said lossthat the insurance contract covered the loss by fire up to the actual cash value thereof; that the terms of the policy could not be set out because one of the defendants had the policy and its contents were well known to the defendants, and they were notified to produce the policy on the trial of the case; that the policy was in the hands of the insurance company or one of its agents.
In the second count of the petition it was alleged that the defendants had damaged the plaintiff in the sum of $500 “by reason
The defendants filed demurrers, both general and special, to both counts of the petition. The court overruled the general demurrer, sustained two grounds of the special demurrer to the first count, and dismissed the second count on general demurrer. The plaintiff excepted to this judgment and assigned error thereon.
One ground of demurrer, which was sustained, was that there was a misjoinder of parties defendant. The court dismissed the first count as to Lambert Motor Company and Dalton Finance Company. The first count fails to allege, as against the motor company or the finance company, any joint liability with that of the other defendants. Shingleur v. Swift, 110 Ga. 891 (36 S. E. 222); Osborn v. Deboard, 115 Ga. 599 (41 S. E. 985); Bagwell v. Johnson, 116 Ga. 464 (42 S. E. 732). The dismissal of these parties from the case was proper. The demurrer which was to paragraph 5 was sustained. It was alleged in this paragraph that the adjuster of the insurance company had promised to pay for the loss and make the voucher payable to the motor company and the plaintiff. The grounds of demurrer were because it was not alleged that the adjuster of the insurance company had any right or authority to accept proofs of loss or to bind the insurance company with any plan to pay the loss, and because it was not alleged what amount the adjuster agreed to pay. The court can not take judicial notice of the authority of an insurance adjuster, but when called in question it is a matter for proof, and it was not error to sustain this ground of demurrer.
The second count of the petition proceeds in tort with general allegations of fraud and collusion. In cases of this kind general allegations are not sufficient as against demurrer, and it is necessary to set out specific facts constituting the fraud. The specific facts are not set out so as to show that they constituted fraud, or so as to show co-operation on the part of the defendants. Upon this ground the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the second count of the petition. Daniel v. Burson, 18 Ga. App. 25 (88 S. E. 745); Ducros v. Peoples Drug Store, 21 Ga. App. 634. (94 S. E. 897).
Judgment affirmed.