176 Ga. 660 | Ga. | 1933
(After stating the foregoing facts.) Quinn sued Usry to enjoin the cutting and removal of timber purchased by Usry from Hines-Yelton Lumber Company but standing upon the lands of Quinn. Usry undertook to vouch the lumber company into court by giving it notice of the suit, and the lumber company responded by filing a paper stating that it appeared solely for the purpose of denying any liability as vouchee. On the day before the filing of this appearance the company was dissolved, and its assets were delivered to its stockholders. Usry filed what he termed a cross-bill, in which' he sought to recover of Hines-Yelton Lumber Company or its stockholders the amount which he had paid for the timber, claiming that it had been lost by reason of the failure of the corporation to keep its lease in force after the expiration of the original term by making the annual payments as provided for in the contract. The stockholders appeared as required by order, and filed objections and demurrer. The judge held that the company had made itself a party by filing a denial of liability and a demurrer. The judge also ordered that the stockholders be made parties to the cross-bill, as prayed. This order was dated January 28, 1932. In a motion filed by the stockholders, attention was called to the fact that’no demurrer had been filed by the lumber company, as recited in this order. A rule nisi was issued on this motion; and on May 3, 1932, the judge again dealt with the question of making parties and with the objections and demurrer of the stockholders. In the order last referred to it was adjudged that the company had not made itself a party by any pleading filed, and that the stockholders were not proper parties to the cross-bill. In the same order the cross-bill was dismissed for misjoinder of parties and of causes of action, on a demurrer filed by the stockholders. To this judgment Usry excepted.
There being no obstacle to a consideration of the intrinsic correctness of the final judgment of May 3, 1932, we approach the question whether the proceeding which was styled a cross-bill could be filed and prosecuted as such against the parties sought to be held thereby. The paper filed by the lumber company was not a general appearance, but expressly declared that the appearance was made solely for the purpose of denying liability as vouchee. Whether or not Usry could reply by showing that the company was in fact liable as vouchee, the special appearance so made by the company certainly would not justify a cross-bill against the company upon an independent cause of action. For Usry to show that the company was liable to him as vouchee, it would be necessary to establish that he had a remedy over against the company, and this does not appear
It appears from the cross-bill that IJsry had no warranty of title from the lumber company. The lease under which the company
Since the lumber company made its appearance solely for the purpose of denying liability as a vouchee, and since the facts stated in the cross-bill show that it was not liable as such, the ease will stand as if no appearance whatever had been made by this company. So the question next for determination is whether the petition filed as a cross-bill alleged matter germane to the original suit, regardless of any appearance by the lumber company. As against the original plaintiff, Usry could not have filed a cross-petition containing new and distinct matters not involved in the petition. State v. Callaway, 152 Ga. 871 (2) (111 S. E. 563). A fortiori, he could not file such a petition as a suit against a third person who was not a party in the original case. “A cross-bill should not introduce new and distinct matters not embraced in the original suit,” but "must be confined to the subject-matter of the original bill.” Josey v. Rogers, 13 Ga. 478. "A cross-bill is a bill brought by a defendant against a complainant or other parties in a former bill depending, touching the matters in question in that bill.” McDougald v. Dougherty, 14 Ga. 674. "The rule in equity is that the matter contained in the cross-bill must be germane to the matter in the original bill.” Brownlee v. Warmack, 90 Ga. 775 (17 S. E. 102). "An answer in the nature of a cross-bill which sets up matters of defense not germane to the case made by the plaintiff’s petition is not maintainable.” Johnson v. Stancliff, 113 Ga. 886 (39 S. E.