1. An oral motion to dismiss is the equivalent of a general demurrer, and the question therein is not whether any particular allegation has been defectively pleaded, but whether the petition in its entirety fails to set out a cause of action.
Minnesota Lumber Co.
v.
Hobbs & Livingston,
122
Ga.
20 (1) (
2. “A general demurrer does not raise questions as to multifariousness, duplicity, or misjoinder of causes of action, or as to nonjoinder or misjoinder of parties. As to such matters, a special demurrer is necessary.”
Grant
v.
Hart,
192
Ga.
153 (4) (
3. Grounds of special demurrer are not good unless set forth in writing and filed at the first term.
Calhoun
v.
Mosley,
114
Ga.
641 (2) (
4. Since the passage of the Uniform Procedure Act, where a suit is filed in a superior court, which has general jurisdiction both in law and in equity, the petition should not be dismissed on general demurrer if it states a cause of action for either legal or equitable relief.
Pardue Medicine Co.
v.
Pardue,
194
Ga.
516 (1) (
5. The allegations of the petition — to the effect, that the defendant husband, who was an insolvent debtor of the bank, executed a deed of gift conveying all of' his property to his wife for the purpose of hindering and delaying creditors — were sufficient, as against demurrer, to set forth a cause of action for the relief prayed, and the trial court erred in striking the petition on oral motion of the defendants.
Echols
v.
Thompson,
210
Ga.
37 (
Judgment reversed.
