The judgment excepted to is the grant of a mandamus absolute and antecedent rulings on the pleadings.
It was further alleged that pursuant to the decree of September 16, 1960, the defendant board has paid in full his pension benefits through the month of August, 1960; that a demand had been made on the board to pay the monthly benefits accruing since August, 1960, but the demand has been refused. Attached to an amendment to the petition is a copy of the letter from the board addressed to petitioner’s counsel, refusing to comply with the demand, in which it was stated: “The Board’s position is that the right of your father to retirement benefits was adjudicated and settled by the judgment of the court in the suit which you brought in Richmond County. As you know, the judgment and decree in that case ordered and directed the disbursement of the entire residue of the fund collected under the provisions of the law which created and governed the retirement system under which he retired, according to the provisions thereof and certain interpretations placed thereon by the Court. In compliance with said judgment and decree and with said law, the Board disbursed the residue of said fund on October 18, 1960.”
The prayers of the petition were for a mandamus absolute requiring the defendant board to pay petitioner the sum of $328.13 per month from October, 1960 to date and all future monthly benefits at the same rate.
The defendant board filed its (a) plea to the jurisdiction, (b) general and special demurrers and (c) its answer. At the hearing for writ of mandamus absolute, the court, without the intervention of a jury, entered its order (a) denying the plea to the jurisdiction as raised by the plea and general demurrer; (b) overruling the demurrers; (c) sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to paragraph 16 of the defendant board’s answer and (d) granted a mandamus absolute as prayed.
In its bill of exceptions the defendant board assigns error upon all these orders.
Plea to the Jurisdiction. The petition discloses that the only defendant board member alleged to be a resident of Richmond County is Carl E. Sanders. The plea asserts that Carl E. Sanders, under the provisions of the Ordinaries’ Retirement Act of 1958 (Ga. L. 1958, p. 185, § 1), is a member of the board solely because of his position as Governor of Georgia and that under Code § 40-107 which provides -that, “The Governor shall reside at the seat of government during his term of office,” Carl E. Sanders is a resident of Fulton County and not of Richmond County, which is his residence as an individual.
The court properly held that Carl E. Sanders, for the purposes of this suit, was a resident of Richmond County. Code § 40-107 does not remove the Governor’s non-official residence or domicile to the seat of government. The action seeking to compel Governor Carl E. Sanders, as a member of the Ordinaries’ Fund Retirement Board, to perform his duties as a member of the board is essentially against him in his personal capacity and not an action in rem against the office. Bryant v. Mitchell, 195 Ga. 135 (23 SE2d 410); McCallum, v. Bryan, 213 Ga. 669 (100 SE2d 916).
The Rulings on the General Demurrers. The allegations
The 1958 Act repealed the 1953 Act, as amended, in its entirety. A new board, known as “The Commissioners of the Ordinaries’ Retirement Fund of Georgia,” was created. Only those ordinaries who were active could qualify to participate in the fund. No provision was made for the payment of any sums to ordinaries who were retired at the time the 1953 Act was repealed. There is no provision of any character in the 1958 Act that imposes any duty on the defendant board to pay the plaintiff any sum out of the funds collected under the 1958 Act, but their duties were to administer the retirement fund for the benefit of the ordinaries who qualified after the passage of the 1958 Act.
The plaintiff contends that though the 1958 Act did not make provision for the continuation of his benefits under the 1953 Act,
In paragraph 16 of its answer the board asserted: “. . . the defendants show that they have duly qualified and are acting as Commissioners of the Ordinaries Retirement Fund of Georgia under the provisions of the Act approved March 21, 1958 (Georgia Laws 1958, page 185), and that all funds being collected and held by them are being administered under said Act of 1958, as amended, and that the plaintiff is not entitled to any of said funds. The defendants hold no funds under the said Act of 1953 or any other act to which the plaintiff is entitled.” The demurrer of the plaintiff to this paragraph was sustained. Error is assigned on this order. Under the ruling we have made above, it was error to strike this paragraph of the defendant’s answer. The defendant board not being obligated to pay plaintiffs any retirement benefits out of the funds collected under the 1958 Act, a plea that the board held no funds under the Act of 1953, if proven, constituted a defense to the petition for mandamus and should not have been stricken. See Brown v. Newport, 212 Ga. 715 (95 SE2d 16).
The amended petition failing to show that the defendant board was under any legal duty to pay the plaintiffs any sums of money out of the Retirement Fund for retired ordinaries which was under their control and management, the trial court erred in sustaining the plaintiffs’ demurrer to paragraph 16 of the defendant board’s answer and in overruling the board’s general demurrer to the amended petition. All subsequent proceedings were nugatory.
Judgment reversed.
