181 Ga. 152 | Ga. | 1935
Field filed a petition in Fulton superior court against L. B. Brown, Thomas B. West, and W. J. Knox, alleging: Petitioner owns described realty in the City of Atlanta, which was sold in May, 1932, for taxes due the city, the purchaser
West and Knox were servéd. West filed a general demurrer to the petition. Brown was hot served-; the return of the sheriff showed that Brown was not to be found in Fulton County. Gn May 8, 1934, Field filed a petition alleging that diligent search by the sheriff and by plaintiff’s counsel had failed to locate Brown; that West was the only person within the knowledge of petitioner and his counsel who knew the identity, place of residence, and
These writs of error were originally transmitted to the Court of Appeals, and by that court were transmitted to this court. The facts of the two cases as alleged in the petition, and the evidence adduced upon the hearing in the contempt proceeding, are so similar that the cases may be said to be interlocked, and obviate the necessity of making two separate decisions. We shall deal first with the ruling on the demurrer, the ground of which was that the allegations of the petition show no cause of action against this defendant. If the demurrer had been sustained, there could have been no foundation for the statements on which the petition for attachment were based, for the cause of action would have been dismissed, and there would have been no case in court, and the matters referred to in the petition for attachment for contempt could not have occurred. The plaintiff’s petition named Knox, West, and Brown as defendants. At the time the demurrer was presented, only Knox and West had been served with a copy of the petition. Brown had not been served, and it appeared from the return of the sheriff that he could not be found in Eulton
Some time before the ruling upon demurrer to which we have just referred, Field, the petitioner, called the court’s attention to the pleadings of file in court, and to the return of the sheriff that Brown could not be found in Fulton County; that he was a necessary party in the cause under the allegations of the petition, which by West’s demurrer were admitted to be true; that, under these allegations as thus admitted, West was the only person who knew the residence or even the existence of .Brown; that in dep
Judgment affirmed in each case.