9 S.E.2d 857 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1940
Reasonable definiteness and certainty in pleading is all that should be required, to render it exempt from attack by special demurrer.
"Reasonable definiteness and certainty in pleading is all that is required; and factitious demands by special demurrer should not be encouraged. Indeed, it is the opinion of the members of this court that this `critic,' not of the old school but of recent times — special demurrer, has lately been given much greater recognition *729
in our courts than his importance or his usefulness has ever deserved." Busby v. Marshall,
In Busby v. Marshall, supra, paragraph 12 of the plaintiff's petition was as follows: "During the fall of 1901, in making a settlement for rent, by mistake, the defendant received from plaintiff seven hundred pounds of lint cotton more than was due him, for which defendant agreed to pay plaintiff, which he has never done, which said lint cotton was worth the sum of $70." The defendant's special demurrer to this paragraph was as follows: "Paragraph 12 does not state when and where defendant received the lint cotton therein referred to, nor does he state how or in what way said alleged mistake occurred." The court there held, "There is a vice in this paragraph of the petition, but the demurrer does not reach it."
In the case sub judice, we think paragraph 2 of the answer as amended was sufficiently definite to withstand the special demurrer. We further think that the allegations therein set forth a defense in terms sufficiently full and distinct to enable the court to determine whether a defense exists and the defendant's adversary to understand the exact nature of the claim made against it. Hicks v. Hamilton,
The judge therefore erred in sustaining the special demurrer to paragraph 2 of the answer as amended, and the further proceedings were nugatory.
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur. *731