36 Ga. App. 237 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1926
H. K. Sligh brought an action of trover against Mrs. S. L. Smith for the recovery of a certain automobile. In an amendment to the petition the plaintiff alleged that since the filing of the suit the plaintiff “transferred for value to Mrs. Anna C. Sligh all of plaintiff’s rights to the fruits of this litigation, and plaintiff therefore prays that said suit proceed for the use and benefit of the said Mrs. Anna C. Sligh.” This amendment was allowed without objection or exception. The jury found a verdict “in favor of the plaintiff.” No person was named in this verdict, but the judgment rendered thereon ordered and adjudged “that the plaintiff, Mrs. Anna C. Sligh, recover,” etc. The defendant, Mrs. Smith, filed a motion for a new trial, entitled as in the case of H. K. Sligh versus Mrs. S. L. Smith. Service of this motion was made only upon H. K. Sligh. Counsel representing Mrs. Sligh thereafter moved to dismiss the motion, upon the ground that service upon H. K. Sligh was ineffectual as service upon Mrs. Sligh and that she, the real party, had not been served with a copy of the motion. The court overruled the motion to dismiss and, after hearing the motion for a new trial upon its merits,
Thus, the only question for decision is whether EL K. Sligh, the original plaintiff, was the proper person upon whom to perfect service of the motion for a new trial. The suit, after amendment, continued with the same plaintiff, but with the express allegation that it should proceed “for the use and benefit of the said Mrs. Anna C. Sligh.” In Norcross Co. v. Summerour, 114 Ga. 156 (3) (39 S. E. 870), the Supreme Court said: “The mere fact that a plaintiff in his pleadings declares his intention of suing for the use of a third person does not raise any question as to the liability either of the plaintiff or of the defendant to such third person. The words declaring the intention to use the recovery for the benefit of another are, as to the defendant, harmless surplusage. He is not concerned in what disposition is to be made of the recovery.” See further, in this connection, Dunlap-Huckabee Auto Co. v. Central Ga. Automotive Co., 31 Ga. App. 617 (122 S. E. 69), and cases cited.
Although a use plaintiff is sometimes referred to and regarded as the real party at interest, it would seem that Mrs. Sligh could not be considered as such under the facts of the instant trover case. The original plaintiff continued to be the plaintiff for the purposes of the record and of enforcing the rights of the usee. It follows that it was proper to make service of the motion for a new trial upon H. II. Sligh, the original plaintiff, and not upon Mrs. Sligh. This conclusion is not altered by the fact that the judgment was in favor of Mrs. Sligh, the usee, without mention of II. K. Sligh. The judgment did not conform to the record, as it should have been in favor of the original plaintiff or in his favor for use, etc. An irregularity in the judgment could not affect the procedure to be had on the motion for a new trial, and did not operate to require service upon the use plaintiff. Bullock v. Dunbar, 114 Ga. 754 (7) (40 S. E. 783); Adams v. Carnes, 111 Ga. 505 (4) (36 S. E. 597).
Judgment affirmed.