25 Ga. App. 743 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1920
1. The amendment to the petition did not set out a new cause of action, and the court did not err in allowing it over the objections urged.
(a) There was no merit in the objection that the amendment set up facts which developed after the filing of the original petition in the ordinary’s court. Jt is not error upon the trial on appeal in the superior court, to allow an amendment to the pleadings which could have been properly allowed in the ordinary’s court if the case had been there pending instead of in the superior court. The true test is: Was the subject-matter of the amendment within the jurisdiction of the ordinary’s court? See, in this connection, Watson v. Goolsby, 86 Ga. 805 (13 S. E. 106) ; Hufbauer v. Jackson, 91 Ga. 301 (18 S. E. 159) ; Stansell v. Massey, 92 Ga. 436 (17 S. E. 821); Berger v. Saul, 109 Ga. 240 (34 S. E. 1036) ; Patterson v. Sams, 2 Ga. App. 756 (59 S. E. 18).
2. It does not appear that the demurrers, to which the court ruled the original petition was subject, were urged against the petition after it had been amended. Therefore the question as to whether the amended petition was subject to those demurrers is not raised.
3. The motion for a new trial contained only the usual general grounds; the evidence amply authorized, if it did not demand, the finding of the jury, and, the trial judge having approved that finding, this court is without authority to interfere.
Judgment affirmed.