106 Ga. 492 | Ga. | 1899
On July 19, 1895, Ray brought his petition against the Home and Foreign Investment and Agency Company, Payne & Tye, and Alonzo Richardson, praying for an injunction to restrain the defendants from proceeding to sell certain realty under a power of sale in a deed given by the plaintiff to the first-named defendant to secure the payment of certain
The defendant first above mentioned answered, denying the right of the plaintiff to the injunction prayed for, and set up by way of cross-bill that certain sums were due it as principal and interest on the promissory notes referred to in the petition of the plaintiff, and that the deed referred to in the petition had been executed to secure the payment of the notes. Defendant prayed that it have judgment against the plaintiff for the amount due on the notes, and also a judgment setting up a special lien on the land embraced in the security-deed. This answer was filed on September 5, 1895, and was not sworn to. On September 27, 1895, the court refused plaintiff’s application for injunction, and this refusal was subsequently affirmed by this court. 98 Ga. 122. On the 28th day of September, 1896, the court, on motion of plaintiff, granted an order that the petition “be' dismissed without prejudice to any rights of the defendants which they may have from the filing of an answer in the nature of a cross-bill.” The plaintiff then filed a demurrer to the defendants’ answer in the nature of a cross-bill, on the following grounds: (1) “ It having been determined by this court that there is no equity in plaintiff’s bill and the sole prayer for relief therein having been refused, there is and was no cause pending in this court, and nothing upon which to base a cross-bill. ” (2) “ Because the j udgment prayed for in said cross-bill is not germane to the cause in the bill filed by plaintiff.” (3) “Because the relief asked for by the defendants in said cross-bill is not of an equitable nature, and they have a plain common-law remedy.” (4) ‘ ‘ Because it does not appear from said cross-bill that the plaintiff, L. R. Ray, is a citizen of Fulton county and that this court has jurisdiction to give judgment against him as prayed.” The court overruled the demurrer. Plaintiff then filed his plea to the jurisdiction of the court, and this plea was, on motion of defendant, stricken. The plaintiff thereupon filed his answer to the defendant’s cross-petition, alleging that since the refusal of the injunction the defendant had gone through the form of selling the land described in the deed, which sale it claimed to have
The jury returned a verdict for the defendant for $2,000 principal, $640 interest coupons, $63.75 interest on coupons, and $270.03 attorney’s fees; and also found that defendant have a special lien on the land embraced in the deed. Judgment was entered accordingly. Afterwards, the defendant having written off part of the recovery, the judgment was amended so as to strike from the amount recovered as interest $160, and from the amount recovered as attorneys’ fees the sum of $15.66. The plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial on the general
Applying these rules to the present case, we think the court properly refused to dismiss the answer in the nature of a cross-bill on the ground that the matter set up therein was entirely independent of, or not germane to, the case made by the original petition. The petition sought to enjoin the defendants from exercising a power of sale in a deed given to secure the payment of certain notes. The defendant answered denying the plaintiff’s right to an injunction, and by way of cross-bill asked for a general judgment on the notes, and a judgment setting up a special lien on the land. This was not a new and distinct matter, entirely independent of that set out in the original petition. The subject-matter of the petition and the answer in the nature of • a cross-bill was one and the same. The issues raised in each involved the same debt, the same deed, the same land, and the same controversy. The petition sought to enjoin the defendant from collecting the debt by pursuing a remedy given in the deed. The effect of the answer was to abandon the remedy sought to be enjoined, and rely upon a remedy to be given by the court into which the defendant had been drawn by the petition of the plaintiff. A mere statement of the case seems to us to be all that is necessary to show that the answer in the nature of a cross-bill “did not introduce new and distinct matters not embraced in the original suit.”
Judgment affirmed.