The plaintiff sued United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company on a sheriff’s official bond. The bond was a joint and several obligation, and the plaintiff had the right to proceed against the surety alone without joining the sheriff.
Jefferson
v.
Hartley,
81
Ga.
716 (
The only questions resolved against a vouchee who is properly vouched into a case are the right of the plaintiff to recover and the amount recoverable. A judgment either for or against the vouchee cannot be entered in the case. The question of whether the vouchee is liable over to the voucher is still an open one. Armour Car Lines v. Summerour (supra) at p. 622. The plaintiff is in no way concerned with a vouchment. It is an estoppel principle involving only the voucher and vouchee. The right of the plaintiff to proceed solely against a surety alone on a joint and several obligation cannot be abridged by a vouchment between the surety and the principal.
It does not appear from the record that the error was harmless, and we cannot say as a matter of law that it was harmless.
The error rendered all further proceedings nugatory.
The court erred in making the sheriff a party defendant over the objection of the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed.
