119 Ga. 721 | Ga. | 1904
The plaintiff below, Roy Parker, brought suit against the Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., in the superior court of Macon county, and in his petition set forth the following allegations: The defendant company is a corporation duly chartered under the laws of Georgia, and had and operated, on the second day of April, 1901, a line of telephone wires and telephones, in said county, for the use of the public and for hire; and also had on that day, and still has, in that county, an agent for the transaction of its business. Plaintiff is a merchant and is engaged in business in the town of Oglethorpe, Ga. Prior to the second day of April, 1901, the defendant company placed one of its telephones in plaintiff’s store, at his instance and request, for use in his business, he having paid therefor the usual charges. This telephone was negligently, carelessly, unskillfully, and unscientifically placed in his .store by said company,in this: that said company neglected and failed to attach and connect a ground wire to said telephone, and also neglected and failed to attach and equip the telephone apparatus with the necessary and usual appliances to prevent injury and damage from iightning or .electricity; all of which was usual and necessary for the safety of one using the telephone. Plaintiff applied to the agent of the company to have the aforesaid appliances attached and placed and connected with the telephone in his store, and gave warning of the dangerous condition in which the telephone had been left by the company ; but notwithstanding this notice and warning that the telephone was incomplete and dangerous, the company continued to neglect to attach the, necessary appliances to render the use of the telephone safe and thus prevent injury to persons near the same at all times. On April 2d, 1901, the plaintiff, while standing
The process attached to the plaintiff’s petition was directed against the defendant company, and the entry of service made by the sheriff was as follows : “ I have this day personally served Dr. M. F. Crumley, agent of the Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company at Oglethorpe, Ga., with a copy of the within writ and process. This February 27, 1902.” No appearance was made by the defendant at the first term of the case, which was on the second Monday in May, 1902. At the November term following, the sheriff was allowed to amend his entry of service so as to make it read as follows: “ By permission of the court, I hereby amend my entry of service by saying that I served the defendant by personally serving Dr. M. F. Crumley, agent in charge of the office of the Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company at Oglethorpe, Ga., with a copy of the within writ and process. This November 10, 1902.” At the November term, 1902, the defendant appeared and filed a traverse to the return of service, on the grounds, (1) that service had not in fact been made upon any officer or agent of the company; and (2) that even if there had been an attempt to perfect service in the manner recited in the sheriff’s return, Dr. Crumley was not such an agent of the company as that service on him would bind it. The sheriff was made a party to the traverse, and was duly served. Counsel for the respective parties agreed that the issues thereby raised should be passed on by the court without the intervention of a jury. A hearing on the traverse was had at the May term, 1903,
Counsel for the defendant then made a motion to open the judgment of default which had been rendered at a previous term. This motion recited, that, while the company had branch offices located at several named cities in this State, the defendant had never established a telephone exchange or had an operator or regular agent or place of transacting its usual and ordinary business in Oglethorpe, Ga., though it did have at that point a long-distance telephone toll-station, located in the drug-store of Dr. Crumley, who was authorized to receive toll from customers using the telephone placed in his store, and who was paid a commission on the tolls received at that station. The grounds on which this motion was based were, in substance, that it was never contemplated by the company that he should represent it in the matter of receiving notices of suits; that none of the company’s officers or any person authorized to act for it had any notice of the plaintiff’s suit until a short time before the November term, 1902, of the court wherein -it was pending; that' if service was ever made upon Dr. Crumley; he wholly failed to advise the defendant of such service; that the company had a meritorious defense, and that unless the judgment of default were' opened and it were allowed to file a plea to the merits, a great hardship'would be worked upon it, amounting to a denial of the protection guaranteed it by' the 14th amendment to the constitution'Of the United States. After argument
In view of the evidence above set forth, the question presented for determination is whether or not Dr. Crumley was an “agent” of the company within the meaning of the Civil Code, §§ 1899, 1900, which provide how service may be perfected on corporations of the class to which the defendant company belongs. If so, personal service on him as its agent would undoubtedly bind the company, and the return of the sheriff, as amended, should be held to be legally sufficient. ' This question is a close one. But we can not say that the corat below erroneously held that Dr. Crumley was such an agent as the above-cited sections of the code contemplate. Of course it was never intended that a corporation should be bound by service on a mere employee or a mere servant of the corporation, in a limited sense. At the same time, it is not necessary that service should be made upon one who is, in a technical sense, an official of the corporation to be served; for section 1899 expressly declares that service “ may be
On the argument before us, counsel for the company called attention to the fact that the return of service originally made by the sheriff was not such as would authorize the entering of a judgment of default at the first term of the case; and in this connection counsel insisted the company should have been permitted to file its defense, inasmuch as the judgment of default was to be treated as a mere nullity. But we can not undertake to pass upon this matter, as no question of this kind appears to have been raised in the trial court, and certain it is that there is in the bill of exceptions no assignment of error which brings the matter under review.
Judgment affirmed.