114 Ga. 921 | Ga. | 1902
Samuel Hecbt Jr. & Sons brought suit in the city -court of Atlanta against the P. H. Snook & Austin Furniture Company upon an open account. To this action the defendant filed a plea “by way of counter-claim,” alleging that the plaintiffs bad damaged it in the sum of $15,000, by reason of an equitable petition which the plaintiffs and other creditors of the defendant had caused to be filed against it, seeking to place the management of the business of the defendant in the hands of a receiver for the benefit of its creditors, and that under this petition so filed the defendant was temporarily enjoined «by the court from transacting its business, ■except in a designated way prescribed by the court. It was alleged' that the averments in the petition were false, and that when the same came on for a hearing the restraining order was dissolved without a trial, and the property of the defendant restored to it. It was also alleged that this equitable petition was filed with malice and without probable cause, and thatthe same was a deliberate and malicious abuse of process. It was further alleged that the plaintiffs in the present case were non-residents of the State, and had no property in the State which could be reached by attachment. By an amendment to the plea the specific damages which were alleged
Under the view we have taken of the case, the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the plea; and this being so, everything that was done thereafter was invalid, and no further reference will be made to the motion fof a new trial. It is unnecessary also for us to determine whether the plea set forth a cause of action, or whether, if it did, the cause of action was for the malicious- prosecution of a civil suit, or for malicious abuse of process. Even if it-be conceded that the plea set forth a cause of action, that cause of action was one arising ex delicto, whether it be one or the other of the causes of action just referred to. The cause of action therein contained being of this character, we do not think the city court of Atlanta had jurisdiction to entertain the same by way of set-off to-an action ex contractu, even though the plaintiffs are non-residents-of this State. The right of a defendant to set off against the plaintiff’s claim an independent demand which he has against the plaintiff, which is now so generally recognized, with certain qualifications, both by the statute law of England and by similar law in the-various States of the Union, had its origin in the Roman law. See Hunter’s Roman Law (3d ed.), 993 et seq., 1017 et seq.; Meriwether v. Bird, 9 Ga. 594. Set-off in the sense above referred to was unknown to the common law. Meriwether v. Bird, supra; Jordan v. Jordan, 12 Ga. 87 (2); 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (1st ed.) 211;
' In considering the question as to how far the courts of this State, •other than the superior courts, may deal with causes or defenses which are to be determined upon equitable principles, it is important to keep in mind the distinction as it once existed between the common-law side and the equity side of the superior courts. There is and can be but one equity court in this State, and that is the ■superior court. The constitution declares that the superior courts
The conclusion of the whole matter is this: The city court of Atlanta is not a court of equity. It has no jurisdiction of a suit-based upon an equitable cause of action. It can take jurisdiction in cases of equitable pleas only where the effect of such pleas is to-defeat the plaintiffs’ causes of action. It can not accord to the defendant affirmative relief, legal or equitable, based entirely upon an equitable right. It has jurisdiction in matters of set-off only in cases where the statute of this State expressly authorizes such courts to take jurisdiction in matters of that kind. It has no jurisdiction whatever to entertain a plea setting up an equitable set-off or an equitable right of set-off, for the simple reason that to entertain such a plea it is necessary for the court not only to recognize an equitable right but to give affirmative relief as a result of such recognition. The right of one sued at law in an action ex contractu to set off damages arising out of a tort committed by the plaintiff, on the ground that the latter is insolvent or is a non-resident, is a right in this State recognized only hy a court of equity, and such a court alone can give affirmative relief of such character. It is immaterial that the cause of action is legal and that the subject-matter of the plea of set-off is purely legal; the right to set the one off against the other is, for the reasons above referred to, an equitable right, which a court having no jurisdiction in equity matters can not recognize and can not enforce. The defendant’s plea was not defensive in its nature at all, so far as the plaintiffs’ cause of action was concerned. It was a cross-action, and a cross-action which the law says could not he allowed in a court of law, notwithstanding' the cause of action in the cross-action was purely legal in its nature. The plea prayed for affirmative relief. True it was legal relief; but the right of the defendant to have the relief prayed for, although it was legal, was dependent upon an equitable right, which the city court had no authority to recognize.
While the case of Bibb Land-Lumber Company v. Lima Machine-Works, supra, in which it was held that the non-residence of the plaintiff afforded equitable ground for the filing by the defendant of an equitable set-off, was brought in a city court, the question of' jurisdiction was not raised or passed on. In the case of Follen
Judgment reversed.