152 Ga. 599 | Ga. | 1922
The case is here by certiorari to the Court of Appeals. The substituted service of summons from the municipal court of Atlanta is by leaving a .copy thereof “ with some person . . domiciled at the residence of the defendant.” Georgia Laws 1913, p. 163. The entry of service of the deputy marshal was: “I have this day served the defendant, J. B. Cooper, 567 Prior St., by leaving a copy of the within action and summons at his most notorious place of abode in this county. Delivered same into the hands of Miss Brown, inmate white person, described as follows:” giving description. Defendant traversed this return,
Other evidence is set out in the statement of facts made by the Court of Appeals. Note that defendant testified: “there is nobody else resides at his house other than himself and wife and Mr. and Mrs. Brown ” — his family on one side of the hall and Brown’s on the other. The cottage was therefore the residence of both families, and, in the sense of the statute as to substituted, service of summons from the municipal court of Atlanta, Brown and his -wife were domiciled at the residence of the defendant, and service on Mrs. Brown, or, as the marshal designated her, “ Miss Brown,” -was legal service, as the Court of Appeals correctly held.
Judgment affirmed.