12 Ga. App. 41 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
The plaintiff in error brought suit against Boswell, as principal, and Jones, as suret3r, for $340, besides interest, on a rental contract. The rental contract was signed by Boswell, as lessee, and contained an obligation to pay $85 per month for the premises described therein. Jones executed, on the back of this lease, a contract in the following language: “In consideration of this lease and of $1.00, I bind myself, my heirs, to faithfully carry out this lease in all its terms.” This contract was'executed under seal. Each of the defendants demurred to the petition, and they filed also a joint plea in abatement. The demurrer of Jones was, in substance, to the effect that the petition showed upon its face that if he occupied any relation to the contract, it was that of a guarantor, and not of a surety, and as a guarantor he could not be sued in the same action with the maker of the contract. To meet this demurrer the plaintiff tendered an amendment alleging, in
Subsequently the plea in abatement was submitted to the court, to be determined without the intervention of a jury, on the following statement of facts: Previous to this suit, the plaintiff had sued these defendants in four separate suits in a justice’s court, for rent for four months, each suit being for $85, as rent for one month. Summons of garnishment in these four suits was duly issued and served upon the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, alleged to be a debtor of the defendant Jones. The four suits came on for trial in the justice’s court, and, by agreement, were consolidated, but before the trial an order was taken, striking Jones as party defendant, and leaving the suits pending against Boswell alone. The justice rendered a judgment against Boswell in each case, for the full amount sued for,—principal, interest, and costs. Boswell thereupon filed an appeal to a'jury in the superior court, but the appeal cases were not sent up to the superior court, each of the cases being dismissed by the plaintiff. The plaintiff paid the justice of the peace all the costs demanded of him by the justice’ in each of the four cases, accordiflg to the items of costs made out by the justice in each case. The plea in abatement alleges, in substance, that the suit in the city court for $340 was identical in all respects with the four separate suits previously brought in the-justice’s court for $85 each; the parties being the same and the amount of the second suit being the same as the aggregate amount of the first four suits. The plea sets forth all the proceedings that were had before the justice on the trial of the first four cases, and alleges that the plaintiff “did not first actually pay to the said justice of the peace the full, complete, and entire amount of the-costs of the said four suits and the four said garnishment pro
Two questions are therefore presented for decision by this court: (1) the question made by the exceptions to the refusal to allow the amendment and to the judgment sustaining the demurrer filed by Jones; and (2) that made by the exceptions to the judgment sustaining the plea in abatement and dismissing the suit. Of course, if this court agreed with the view of the trial judge as to the second question, a decision on the first question would be unnecessary; but, in view of the fact that this court has come to the conclusion that he erred in sustaining the plea in abatement, it becomes necessary also to consider the first assignment of error.
Bearing this distinction in mind, it seems to us that the language used by Jones in his agreement is susceptible of the construction that he bound himself jointly with the principal maker; for he does not state that if the principal maker fails to pay the rent, he will pay it, but “in consideration of this lease and of $1, I bind myself, my heirs, to faithfully carry out this lease in all its terms.” In other words, it appears that he became a joint obligor with Boswell, the principal maker, and is bound not onjy as a surety, but really as a joint obligor, by the express terms of his agreement. So far as the writer is concerned, as he has said in the case of Small Co. v. Glaxton, 1 Ga. App. 83 (57 S. E. 977), the distinction between a contract of suretyship and one of guaranty is purely fan
Irrespective of this'question, however, it is well settled in this State, and also in many other jurisdictions, that parol evidence is always admissible to show the real consideration of a contract,— to show whether it is a contract of suretyship, or whether it is a contract of guaranty. In the case of Burke v. Napier, 106 Ga. 327, 328 (32 S. E. 134), the question was ably discussed by Mr. Justice Fish, the present Chief Justice, and it was held that, although the contract recited a particular consideration, parol evidence was admissible to show that in fact it was made upon a different consideration than that expressed. And in the recent case of Baggs v. Funderburke, 11 Ga. App. 173 (74 S. E. 937), this court held that “a contract on the back of a promissory note, signed by one other than the payee thereof and in the following words, ‘Eor value received, we hereby guarantee the payment of the within note at maturity, or at any time thereafter, with, interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum until- paid, waiving demand, notice of nonpayment and protest/ prima facie imports a contract of guaranty,” but that “parol evidence is . . admissible to show that the party signing the contract received no independent consideration, and that the contract is in fact one of suretyship.” It seems to us that this decision is controlling on the first question raised by this record, and that the ruling of the learned trial judge in sustaining the demurrer filed by Jones was erroneous.
Counsel for defendants in error endeavor to distinguish the Baggs
It is difficult to tell, from the evidence, whether the plaintiff had paid all the costs in the previous suits in the justice’s' court, before commencing his suit in the city court, but there is no question as to two facts: first, he paid all costs that had been demanded of him by the justice of the peace or that were contained in the itemized statement of the costs which was a part of the judgment entered by the justice of the peace; and there was no effort on the part of the plaintiff to avoid the payment of costs, but he in good faith paid all the costs that- had accrued in the justice’s court, so far as he knew, or so far as had been demanded of him. The Civil Code (1910), § 5992, provides: “When a case is disposed of, the costs of the same, including fees of witnesses, shall be included in the judgment against the party dismissing, being non-suited, or cast; and it shall be the duty of the clerk of any court in this State, and of any justice of the peace, or other officer who may issue an execution, to indorse on said execution, at the time it is issued, the date and amount of the judgment, the items of the bill of cost (written in words), and the amount of each item distinctly stated in figures; and no costs, or items of costs, shall in any ease be demanded by any such officer, which are not itemized and indorsed as herein provided.” In the present case, the justice entered a judgment for the costs. The entry from his docket, which was in evidence, showed that the costs were made a part of the judgment in each ease, and that there was an itemized statement of the costs accruing in each case. Presumptively this itemized statement of the costs was correct. All of these costs shown by the
In Wilkins v. McMahan, 8 Ga. App. 182 (68 S. E. 941) “upon the trial of a plea in abatement, filed upon the ground that the plaintiff had reinstituted his action after dismissal without payment of the costs due in the first suit) it appeared that the plaintiff went to the clerk of the court in which the suit was pending and joaid what the clerk said was the amount of the costs and took a receipt for-it, and was not informed of any additional costs being due until after the second suit had been brought, when, for the first time, it appeared th$t there was a small item of costs which had not been included in the bill so rendered by the clerk. Held, that a finding against the plea in abatement was authorized, there being nothing to impeach the good faith of the transaction.” The principle there announced is applicable to the present case. The plaintiff paid all the costs that had been demanded of him by the justice, all the costs that had been itemized by the justice, and all the costs which were included in the judgment for the costs. Neither the justice nor any officer of the court demanded of him any additional costs, and neither the justice nor any officer of the court contended that there was an omission of any item of costs for which judgment had been rendered. It would be unjust to the