113 Ga. 182 | Ga. | 1901
The plaintiffs, Fred. Reeves and others, brought against the defendants, Squire Jackson and others, an equitable petition for injunction and for the recovery of a described house and lot. The facts upon which the former based their claim to the premises in dispute were fully set forth in their petition, and it does
Treating the order, though in form one of dismissal, as a judgment of nonsuit, our question is: did the court err in passing the same? We feel constrained to hold that it did. A careful reading of the evidence set forth in the bill of exceptions shows that the plaintiffs introduced testimony supporting every material allegation in their petition. Upon the assumption that their witnesses were entitled to credit, they proved their case as laid. This being so, they ought not to have been nonsuited. It is inferable from the use of the phrase, “ failing to make out a case,” that his honor may have entertained the opinion that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a recovery upon the facts they alleged, even if they did succeed in proving them; or, in other words, that their petition did not set forth a cause of action. Whether or not tiffs is so is a question which was not, so far as the record discloses, properly made in the court below, and certainly is not presented by the bill of exceptions. It could have been raised by a general demurrer to the petition. It was not raised by the motion to nonsuit. The office of such a motion is hot to test the legal sufficiency of a petition, but the sufficiency of evidence introduced to sustain the allegations thereof. Anderson v. Pollard, 62 Ga. 46; Bank v. Smith, 24 U. S. 173; Heard’s Stephen oh Pleading, *90. The only question properly presented by such a motion is: has the plaintiff submitted evidence which, if true, makes out the case stated in the petition ? If so, the case should be allowed to go before the jury, the credibility of the witnesses being a matter exclusively for their determination. If the testimony does not come up to the requirement just indicated, there should be a nonsuit, if the defendant asks for it.
The principle we now assert was, to some extent, involved in the carefully-considered case of Roberts v. Keeler, 111 Ga. 181, in
Judgment reversed.