56 Fla. 530 | Fla. | 1908
In an action by Pollock & Bernheimer ' against Charles W. Driver and Walter Ray, the sheriff having returned that Driver did not- reside in the county, the plaintiffs proceeded to take judgment against Ray alone.
Numerous errors are assigned, which we are compelled to consider without assistance from the defendant, in error, who have filed no brief here.
The first and third assignments may be treated together. Both attempt to raise the sufficiency of the service of notice for hearing demurrers. The notices were sent by mail, the attorneys for the respective parties residing in different towns. At the time thus set for hearing the demurrer to the declaration, the attorneys for the defendant Ray was physically present in court and admitted the receipt of the service more than five days theretofore. A formal service by the sheriff could not be more conclusive. The rule merely provides that demurrers may be heard and determined in vacation upon five days’ notice and is silent as to the manner of service of this notice. We are not dealing with process necessary to bring a party into court, but with the regulation of matters of procedure after the parties are regularly in court; nor are we asked to indulge in presumptions as to the probabilities that notice by mail was actually received; the fact of its timely reception is admitted.
As to the hearing of the second demurrer, the attorney for the defendant appeared in response to the notice and objected that the title of the cause was wrongly stated in the notice in that Driver was not named as a co-defendant, and also- that the service was by mail; the objections were overruled, but the court being otherwise engaged set the hearing for a future date to suit the
The second assignment is based upon the order overruling the demurrer to the declaration, which consisted of the common counts. Two grounds are argued here. It is claimed that there Was a variance between the writ and the declaration and that the allegation in the declaration in the statement of the parties defendant, “who were heretofore partners,” is by way of recital and does not show when the partnership' ceased. Without admitting that a variance between the writ and declaration is ground for demurrer, Cooper v. Livington, 19 Fla. 684, Robinson v. Hartridge, 13 Fla. 501, it is clear that the demurrer is without substance. The writ proceeded against Driver and Ray, without indicating a partnership existent or dissolved. The declaration shows that the indebtedness sued for arose out of a partnership liability, which partnership had been dissolved before action brought. In Marx v. Culpepper, 40 Fla. 322, 24 South. Rep. 59, we held that a joint liability against two or more defendants may be sustained by proof of such liability without reference to a partnership relation, or by showing such relation without alleging it in the declaration. It is then solely a matter of form and not subject to demurrer.
The fourth plea attempting to set up a release from liability of t'he defendant Ray after the dissolution, wholly fails to set up any consideration for such release and was therefore subject to this specific ground of demurrer addressed thereto. Driver’s obligation to pay the debt already existed and a mere promise on his part to pay the debt, without change as to the evidence of the debt, its manner of solution or other circumstances, added nothing to the pre-existing liability and was no consideration for the release of Ray.
It is urged for error that the court overruled a demurrer to evidence. This assignment we cannot consider, the record proper failing to show such demurrer. As we held recently, Loeffler v. City of West Tampa, 55 Fla. 276, 46 South. Rep. 426, a demurrer to evidence, the joinder therein and the rulings thereon form part of the record proper; they appear here only in the bill of exceptions and are not, therefore, properly before us.
There are many assignments based upon the admissibility of evidence. The case was tried by the court, a jury having been waived. We shall not pass specifically upon these assignments for the. reason that the perfectly legitimate evidence so overwhelmingly preponderates in favor of the findings that none other would be permitted. The defense has been almost wholly of the
The judgment is affirmed.