Mrs. Jessie McMillen sued Mrs. J. Paul Walker to recover triple damages and attorneys’ fees by reason of the failure of the defendant to file a proper registration, statement on the premises rented by the defendant within the time required and the failure to refund to the plaintiff the difference between the amount fixed as a maximum rent subject to refund and the amount ultimately fixed as maximum rent.
It appeared, on the face of the petition that the order of the Area Rent ¡Director directing the refund was a retroactive order.
On the trial of that case the judge, trying the case without a jury, found against the defendant for triple damages and attorneys’ fees. There was no demurrer to the petition in that case, nor was the sufficiency, of the petition questioned in any other proper manner. The,
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defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied, and she excepted. This court affirmed the denial of a new trial on the ground that a motion for new trial was not the proper method of attacking the sufficiency of the petition, which showed on its face that it did not set forth a cause of action under the rulings of this court in
Mitcham
v.
Patterson,
82
Ga. App.
468 (
The present action is one to set aside the judgment in the above case on the ground that the petition in that case did not set forth a cause of action. The trial judge set aside the judgment, and Mrs. McMillen excepted. This judgment was correct. Where a petition does not set forth a cause of action, and such question has not been previously raised in a proper manner by demurrer or otherwise, the defendant may raise the issue even after judgment by a motion to set aside the judgment.
Kelly
v.
Strouse & Bros. Co.,
116
Ga.
872 (5a) (
In the former action Mrs. Walker alleged in her answer that the Area Rent Director was without authority to issue the alleged order and especially to undertake to make the same retroactive in effect. The plaintiff in that case demurred to this allegation on the grounds that the allegations constituted a collateral attack upon the order of the Area Rent Director, and that there were no allegations of fact to support the conclusion. Mrs. Walker excepted to the order sustaining this demurrer to paragraph 3 of the answer in the lower court and in this court. This court, for some unknown reason, failed to pass expressly on this exception, but did impliedly rule against the exception of Mrs. Walker. Mrs. McMillen now contends that the ruling on this demurrer fixes the law of the case to the effect that the answer of Mrs. Walker raised the question of the sufficiency of the petition, and that the petition was held to be good as against the point made. Under the circumstances, it will be presumed-that this court in impliedly ruling that the demurrer aforesaid was properly sustained so ruled for the reason that the petition showed on its face that the order of the Area Rent Director was retro
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active, and that it is not permissible practice to raise issues of law in an answer to a petition where the defect appears on the face of the petition. Code (Ann.) § 81-303;
Jones
v.
McNealy,
114
Ga.
393 (
The court did not err in setting aside the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
