Under Code Ann. § 81A-112 (b) every defense to a claim for relief in any pleading shall be asserted in the responsive pleading thereto if one is required, except that certain specified defenses may be raised by motion. Included among these motion defenses are the three urged by appellant. Code Ann. § 81A-112 (b) (2), (3) and (5). The only limitation on raising these defenses by motion is that they must be made before or at the time of pleading if a further pleading is permitted; there the applicable time limit is within the 30 days given to serve the answer. Code Ann. § 81A-112 (a). Of course the pleader may choose at his option to forgo the opportunity to raise his defenses *99 by motion and to include them in his responsive pleading; here the responsive pleading was the answer, which was due within 30 days from the time of service of the complaint and summons. Code Ann. § 81A-112 (a). Whether the defendant wishes to raise his defense by motion or by answer, he is given 30 days within which to do so. If he fails to do either, he may waive his defense under the applicable rules of Code Ann. § 81A-112 (g) and (h). Appellant did not waive her defenses; she chose to include them in her answer rather than to raise them by a pre-answer motion. Later, after the pleadings were closed, the motion to dismiss was made. The question here therefore is whether the defenses enumerated in Code Ann. § 81A-112 (b) when included in the answer may be subsequently raised by a motion to dismiss.
The choice of whether to raise the § 81A-112 (b) defenses by motion or by answer is entirely at the option of the pleader. If the choice is to proceed by motion, it must be before or at the time of the responsive pleading. The applicable time limit here is the 30-day period before the answer was due. After that 30 days the pleadings were closed and any motion to dismiss thereafter would not have been made "before or at the time of pleading.” In the case sub judice appellant had 30 days in which to make her motion to dismiss; she allowed that time to elapse without making her motion, choosing to raise her defenses in her answer, as she was permitted to do. However the time having passed within which a motion might have been made, appellant cannot now bring such a motion under Code Ann. § 81A-112 (b). The proper procedure to be followed when the defense is made by answer is application for a preliminary hearing and determination under Code Ann. § 81A-112 (d).
Howland v. Weeks,
Nothing in
Southern Concrete Co. v. Carter Const. Co.,
We are aware of the interpretation of the comparable federal rule in Majerus v. Walk, 275 FSupp. 952 (D. Minn. 1967) which reaches a different result than we do here. That case however holds that the literal wording of the statute appears to prohibit a motion to dismiss which is made subsequent to the filing of an answer which contains the same defenses. It is true that in interpreting our Civil Practice Act federal cases, while not binding precedent, will be considered as persuasive authority.
Poole v. City of Atlanta,
We would be compelled to affirm the trial judge on the technically correct ground that appellant made an untimely motion to dismiss under Code Ann. § 81A-112 (b) when the proper procedure was in fact application for a preliminary hearing under Code Ann. § 81A-112 (d) were it not for the following language: "When [a Rule 12 (b)] defense is raised in the answer, a separate application for a preliminary hearing typically is necessary. In theory, a request for a preliminary hearing falls within the definition of a motion in Rule 7 (b) and should comply with the formal requirements of that rule by stating with particularity the grounds therefor and the relief or order sought... Thus
a notice of hearing similar to.. .a motion to dismiss
. . .
should suffice.”
(Emphasis supplied.) Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil, § 1373, p. 713 (1969). (Emphasis supplied.) The record reveals that appellant’s motion to dismiss was in writing, noted the three grounds upon which it was predicated and requested a dismissal on those grounds. The cases are too numerous to cite in full which hold that there is no magic in the nomenclature given a pleading, but it is the substance of the pleadings that determines its nature.
*101
Hatcher v. Georgia Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
