179 Ga. 449 | Ga. | 1934
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The Southern Railway Company, having paid Mrs. Autry in full, seeks by means of this action to compel the joint defendant in fi. fa., the City of Rome, to pay its aliquot part of their joint liability as evidenced by the execution. It would seem, upon principles of natural justice and equity, that as Mrs. Autry’s original action was against the defendants jointly, and since her recovery imposed equal liability on each of the defendants to her suit, the demand by the railway company is not ill founded. However, the city contends that the equitable doctrine of contribution has no application in this case, because the city and the railway company were joint tortfeasors. The city contends that the common law upon this subject is still of force in Georgia; and that as contribution among joint tort-feasors was not permitted by the rules of the common law, the petition in this case presents no cause of action. The prime question which confronts us is whether a codefendant in a judgment whose liability has been fixed by verdict, either specifically, as provided by the Civil Code, § 4512, or generally, depending upon the number of codefendants (§ 4588), shall be debarred of all right of contribution because he was a joint tortfeasor. This question was not answered in Autry v. Southern Railway Co., 167 Ga. 136 (supra) for the sufficient reason, as stated by Mr. Justice Hines, that it was premature, it appearing from the record that the railway company had at that time paid out nothing. It was apparent that the plaintiff could not ask to be reimbursed in any amount, when it had paid nothing. Subsequently, on November 13, 1928, the railway company paid Mrs. Autry, in full, the amount specified in the receipt.
So the question is now squarely presented whether the plaintiff, by paying off the joint fi. fa. and having the fi. fa. transferred to itself, discharged the obligation of its codefendant, the city, and released it from liability on the judgment, for the sole reason that, although the city was a codefendant, the original action was. ex delicto and not ex contractu. At common law, the right of contribution is denied in actions ex delicto. Is that feature of the
The cases of W. & A. R. Co. v. Atlanta, 74 Ga. 774, Schneider v. Augusta, 118 Ga. 610 (45 S. E. 459), and Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Macon Railway Light Co., 140 Ga. 309 (78 S. E. 931), did not involve the doctrine of contribution. No joint verdict or judgment had been rendered against the alleged joint tort-feasors fixing joint liability and making them “equally bound to bear the common burden.” In W. & A. R. Co. v. Atlanta, Montgomery recovered judgment, and the City of Atlanta brought suit against the railroad company to recover the amount paid, claiming that the negligence of the railroad company was the cause of Montgomery’s injuries, and that the railroad company was liable over to the city for the full amount of the judgment. In the Schneider case, Mrs. Sherwood recovered a judgment against the city for personal injuries received by falling through a defect in a sidewalk. Schneider was not a defendant, but was vouched into court by the city. After paying the judgment the City of Augusta sued Schneider as an abutting-property owner who placed the grating in the sidewalk through which Mrs. Sherwood fell and was injured. This was not really a suit for contribution, but a contention that the property owner was liable over to the city on account of his negligence. In the Central of Ga. Ry. Co. case, after recovery by Minor (2 Ga. App. 804, 59 S. E. 81), the Central Eailway Company paid the judgment, and then sued the Macon Eailway & Light Company for the amount it had been compelled to pay. This was not a suit for contribution, but an action for indemnity for the full amount of
While the Southern Railway Company may not have done exactly what was suggested, and in the manner and form of the suggestion contained in 167 Ga. 136 (supra), upon the point which we are now considering, that is, whether the common-law rule as to joint tortfeasors has been changed by the law of Georgia, we are of the opinion that the Civil Code, § 5971, recognizes no distinction. Section 5971 effected a change antagonistic to the doctrine of the common law which exempts joint tort-feasors from liability. It declares that “When judgments have been obtained against several persons, and one or more of them has paid more than his just proportion of the same, he or they may, by having such payment entered on the fi. fa. issued to enforce said judgment, have full power to control and use said fi. fa. as securities in fi. fa control the same against principals or cosecurities, and shall not be compelled, as heretofore, to sue the codebtors for the excess of payment on such judgment.” Certain it is that § 5971 gave the Southern Railway Company “full power to control and use said fi. fa. as securities in fi. fa. control the same against principals or cosecurities,” and that as against the demurrer on the ground that “under the allegation of said petition plaintiff was a joint tort-feasor with defendant, and under the law plaintiff would not be entitled to a recovery of any sum from defendant,” the petition was immune from attack. It can not be said that the Southern Railway Company, having acquired control of said fi. fa. and the right to use the same “as securities in fi. fa. control the same against principals or cosecurities,” did not have the right of contribution under section 4588, which declares that if an action at law will not give a complete remedy, equity may entertain jurisdiction, where two or more persons are equally bound to bear the common burden and one has paid more than his share. As further illustrative of the point before us: Section 3561 provides: “All the foregoing provisions shall apply to cases where there are more than one surety, so as to en
However, as has already been pointed out, the provision of § 4588 that “In cases of joint, or of joint and several, or of several liabilities of two or more persons, where all are equally bound to bear the common burden, and one has paid more than his share, he'is entitled to contribution from the others,” in our opinion obliterates the common-law doctrine upon which the Court of Appeals based its learned and elaborate opinion. Having reached this opinion directly for the reasons thus far stated, it is unnecessary to consider section 4218 of the Code of 1910, or the rulings in Howell v. Shands, 35 Ga. 66, Williams v. Merritt, 109 Ga. 213, 216 (34 S. E. 312), and Underwood v. Underwood, 139 Ga. 241 (77 S. E. 46, L. R. A. 1918A, 1), to the effect that a judgment is a contract of record, and when a judgment is obtained the precedent cause of action merges into and is extinguished by the judgment and becomes a new cause of action upon which a new suit may be maintained; though the law embraced in these citations seems to reinforce the views we have expressed, and perhaps supplied the reason for changing the common-law rule as to tortfeasors. We shall only briefly refer to the synonymity in-the words “tort” and “trespass” as contained in § 4503 of the Code of 1910, or to the cases of McCalla v. Shaw, 72 Ga. 458, and Hunter v. Wakefield, 97 Ga. 543 (25 S. E. 347, 54 Am. St. R. 438), where the question of contribution was not under consideration, though from these it will be seen that in this State “tort” and “trespass”
Judgment reversed.