Southern States Life Insurance v. Statham

4 Ga. App. 482 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908

Powell, J.

1. In considering, on demurrer, the petition in an action upon several written contracts, the court will look to the writings alone to determine their meaning and legal effect, where they are unambiguous, and will disregard conclusions of the pleader contrary to the true construction.

2. A necessary incident to the existence of the relationship of principal and surety is that the principal shall contract to assume the obligation as to which the suretyship arises.

3. If A contracts to perform services for B, but upon the distinct understanding that B shall not be liable to pay therefor, and that A shall be paid by C, who obligates himself to do so, the relationship of principal and surety as to this transaction is not created between B and C; nor are B and C joint obligors as to the debt due A. The rule is not changed by reason of the fact that C is the agent of B.

4. In the case at bar the written contracts disclosed, that no liability . attached to the oniy defendant suable in the venue where the action was instituted, that the other defendants were residents of this State and of a county other than that in which the suit was brought,- and that they were not joint obligors. The court erred in not dismissing the action, on demurrers properly raising these points. Judgment reversed.

The plaintiff alleged, that the contract was one, though evidenced in three .separate documents, by the terms of which he was employed as agent of the insurance company at a salary of $4,250 per annum, and the sum sued for is the balance due him thereunder; that Shaw was the agent of the insurance company and its director of agencies, and had power and authority to employ and contract with agents of it; that the agency company is a plan or method of the insurance company of employing and handling its agencies, and is a part and parcel of the insurance company in the conduct and management of its business and its agent to conduct the same; that it employed the agency company and Shaw as its agents, acting for it and on its behalf, in the employment of Statham as agent, and became liable to him in the full amount of said salary, jointly and severally with the agency company and Shaw; that after their execution the defendants treated and construed the three contracts as one, and dealt with Statham under them as one contract of employment of him as agent of the insurance company at a salary of $4,250 per annum, and the insurance company paid to him, under said contract, $81.73 per week; and that the agency company and Shaw were and are the sureties for the insurance company, and no benefit followed to them or either of them by said contracts or obligations, but the' consideration was a benefit given to the insurance company as principal. Each of the defendants demurred generally, and on the grounds: (1) that no facts are set forth that give the court jurisdiction of person or subject-matter; (2) for misjoinder of parties defendant; (3) for misjoinder of causes of action. The demurrer was overruled, and the defendants excepted. Jackson & Orme, Allen Fort & Son, for plaintiffs in error. E. A. Hawkins, contra.
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