161 Ga. 457 | Ga. | 1925
B. Mifflin Hood Brick Company filed suit against J. W. Eice and J. E. Mangham, alleging that defendants were indebted to petitioner in a stated sum; that J. E. Mangham is the owner of a described house and lot; that J. W. Eice contracted to build and did build a house on the lot described; that the plaintiff is a materialman, and sold and delivered to contractor Eice, upon the premises described, material of the value of $987, which was used in the improvement of the property; that plaintiff filed its materialman’s lien against the property; that its action was brought .within twelve months from the time the amount stated became due; that when the material was furnished the defendant Eice was a resident of Fulton County, Georgia, but since the completion of the contract has absconded and moved his residence to the State of Florida, and can not be sued and served in the usual manner, and his present place of residence is unknown to petitioner. The prayers of the petition are that the court pass an order to perfect service upon the defendant Eice as a non-resident; that plaintiff have and recover a judgment against him for the amount sued for; that plaintiff’s claim of lien on the property described be set up and established against it; and that plaintiff have such other and further relief as in equity and justice he is entitled to. The defendant Mangham filed his general demurrer to the petition, which was sustained, and the plaintiff excepted.
The judgment of the court below, sustaining the general demurrer to the petition, must be affirmed, in view of the rulings already made by this court upon the question raised by the assignment of error. In the case of Columbian Iron Works v. Crystal Springs Co., 145 Ga. 621 (89 S. E. 751), it was held: “There can be no valid judgment of foreclosure of a materialman’s lien for materials furnished to a contractor, upon the real estate improved