This court granted certiorari in the case of
Shell v. Watts,
Mrs. Evelyn Watts sued Clayton Shell for the homicide of her minor son, Steve Watts. Shell sought to bring in two additional persons as third-party defendants, Elliott and Helton, alleging that the shotgun with which Shell accidentally shot Watts was defective, that Elliott sold the shotgun to Helton, and Helton sold it to William Watts, father of the deceased Steve Watts, both warranting the shotgun to be fit for the ordinary purposes for which it would be used. Judgment was demanded against the third-party defendants for all sums which Mrs. Watts may recover against Shell.
Helton is a resident of Catoosa County, the county in which the original action was brought. Elliott is a resident of Floyd County. Shell alleged that the two third-party defendants were joint trespassers, and that Elliott is subject to the jurisdiction of Catoosa Superior Court since his joint trespasser is a resident of Catoosa County. The trial judge sustained the motion of Elliott to dismiss the third-party complaint against him because he is a resident of Floyd County.
*475
The Court of Appeals in Headnote 4 of the opinion
(Shell v. Watts,
The factual situation in
Register v. Stone’s Independent Oil Distributors,
In the present case Shell by third-party complaint sued two alleged joint tortfeasors in the county of the residence of one of them. The Constitution, Art. VI, Sec. XIV, Par. IV (Code Ann. § 2-4904) gives the court of the residence of either tortfeasor jurisdiction of the action, and the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the judgment of the lower court dismissing the third-party complaint against Elliott.
Judgment reversed in part.
