146 Ga. 149 | Ga. | 1916
The Piedmont Fertilizer Company brought an action of trover against J. F. Petty,'to recover certain promissory notes alleged to be in the possession of the defendant, and as belonging to the plaintiff, of the alleged, value of $217.70. The defendant failed to replevy the property, and the plaintiff replevied, giving bond for the eventual condemnation-money. Upon the call of the case the plaintiff’s counsel announced that he would dismiss the trover suit, signed and filed an order dismissing the ease, and handed it to the clerk of the superior court. The defendant thereupon moved for a judgment in his favor against the plaintiff, for the value of the notes replevied, as sworn to in the plaintiff’s affidavit for bail. The court offered to allow counsel for the defendant to take judgment for the notes and accounts which the defendant had turned over to the sheriff under the bail process, with costs of suit. This they declined to accept; and thereupon the judge announced that he would allow counsel for the plaintiff to withdraw the order of dismissal. The judge also overruled the motion for judgment in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff for the amount the notes replevied were sworn by the plaintiff to be worth. To these rulings the defendant excepted.
1. When the plaintiff dismissed its suit, it was out of court and beyond the court’s jurisdiction. Our law provides that a plaintiff in any action, in any court, may dismiss his action either in term time or vacation. Civil Code, § 5627. There is no contention here that the case was dismissed because of a mutual mistake of law upon the part of counsel for both sides as to the legal effect of such action, as in the case of Seals v. Stocks, 100 Ga. 10 (30 S. E. 278), or of being misled by the opposite party, or the like. The case was called in its order, and the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed it; and it was not until the defendant asked for judgment against the plaintiff that the latter was allowed to reinstate its case. In the case of Simpson v. Brock, 114 Ga. 294 (40. S. E. 266), it was held: "When a plaintiff by his counsel voluntarily dismisses his petition, whether for a good or bad reason, the court has no authority, over objection by the defendant, to reinstate the action.” The principle ruled in the Simpson case is controlling here. The court had no discretion to allow the present case reinstated; and it does not fall within that class of cases where the judge either has a discretion, or where the dismissal was based on a mutual mistake, or the like.
Judgment reversed.