(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1.
The bill of exceptions brought by Ira W. Williams contained the following recital of facts:- “Plaintiff’s attorneys also contend that Ira W. Williams acknowledged service upon said petition .as appears on said petition, bearing date of the 18th day of May,' 1921. To this alleged acknowledgment, by permission of the court, Ira W. Williams filed his traverse, setting up that he had not acknowledged service and had not authorized any one to do so for him; that the alleged acknowledgment was in the handwriting of Lee J. Williams, and that he had not authorized Lee J. Williams to so acknowledge such service, and he had not ratified the same, and he asked that Lee J. Williams be made a party to said traverse, and this traverse was made at the first term after said alleged acknowledgment. This traverse was allowed and ordered filed and served upon Lee J. Williams, who was made a party by order of court. After argument of counsel both pleas to the jurisdiction and upon
It is contended that this statement is a qualification of the judge’s certificate of the truth of the bill, and that for this reason the bill of exceptions should be dismissed. We cannot concur in this view. The bill of exceptions recites in effect that the judge held that the traverse to the acknowledgment of service was without merit, regardless of whether Lee J. Williams had been served with the traverse, and for that reason dismissed it instanter. It is not assigned that any party contended that the judge should not pass upon the sufficiency of the traverse until Lee J. Williams had been served therewith. So that the statement that “no point was made before the court that the traverse had not been served on Lee J. Williams” in no way contradicts any of the recitals of the bill of exceptions, which are unqualifiedly certified as true, and the motion to dismiss is therefore denied. Scott v. Whipple, 116 Ga. 211 (2) (
This ruling is not in conflict with the ruling in Hawkins v. 'Mayor &c. of Americas, 102 Ga. 786 (
-Irrespective of whether Ira W. Williams should be estopped .to deny his authority in signing the name of Lee'J, Williams-to
Furthermore, we do not think that it was aided by the plea of non est factum which he entered as to Lee J. Williams. Regardless of whether such a plea is - personal and could be made only by the latter (see Civil Code of 1910, § 5676), the question of their joint liability should be determined on the final trial, and not on a dilatory plea. In the case of Central of Georgia Ry. Co. v. Brown, 113 Ga. 414 (3) (
But it is contended that the plea to the jurisdiction, in alleging that Ira W. Williams was a resident not of the county of Fulton but of the county of Thomas, would show that the
If the entry had recited service by leaving a copy of the petition and process at the defendant’s residence, then unquestionably a traverse of the return would have been necessary. The defendant could not have successfully denied that he resided in Fulton county, without traversing the officer’s return and making him a party. Sindall v. Thacker, 56 Ga. 50 (1); Kimsey v. Macon Lumber Co., 136 Ga. 369 (
In the case of Bell v. New Orleans &c. R. Co., 2 Ga. App. 812 (
“Prima facie, at least, the return of an officer imports verity; and when there is no traverse of a sheriff’s entry of service, any question as to whether the defendant was legally served may be disregarded.” Citizens Bank of Bainbridge v. Fort, 15 Ga. App. 427 (1), 429 (
The defendant’s special appearance was altogether without merit.
This case is unlike that of Frank Adams Electric Co. v. Witman, 16 Ga. App. 574 (
The defendant Ira W. Williams being bound by the untraversed return of service, it is immaterial whether the acknowledgment of service made in his behalf by Lee J. Williams was valid or not. If the court erred in striking the attack upon this acknowledgment, the error was harmless, and no decision is necessary upon the point.
After disposing of the preliminary pleas or motions of Ira W. Williams the case proceeded to a trial upon its merits, and resulted in the direction of a verdict in favor of the plea of non est factum filed by Lee J. Williams, and in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant Ira W. Williams for the amount sued for. We think that when the verdict was directed in favor of the plea of non est factum of Lee J. Williams, jurisdiction over the person of Ira W. Williams, who did not reside in Carroll county, would thereby have been lost, and that the direction of a verdict and judgment against him would have been erroneous, unless there was 'a waiver of jurisdiction, or the equivalent. A proper disposition would ordinarily have been to dismiss the case as against this defendant for want of jurisdiction. Lester v. Mathews, 56 Ga. 656 (4); Fullington v. Killen, 65 Ga. 575 (3); Rounsaville v. McGinnis, 93 Ga. 579 (3) (
The scope of the estoppel is such as to render it the equivalent of a waiver of jurisdiction. Jurisdiction of the person may of course be waived. Therefore, the court committed no error in directing the verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the nonresident defendant, notwithstanding a verdict was at the same time directed in favor of the resident defendant.
The sixth headnote has reference to the assignments in the bill of exceptions brought by the plaintiff in the court below and termed by counsel a cross-bill. We think that it is an independent bill, and shall so dispose of it, although, the cases being kindred, we are considering them together in a single opinion.
The plaintiff undertook to carry the burden of proving as to Lee J. Williams the execution of the note sued upon, which the law placed upon it upon the filing of the plea of non est factum. Among other things, Harvey Entrekin testified that after January 3, in the year 1921, he worked in the office of Boykin & Boykin, the attorneys for the plaintiff, and that in the early part of 1921, in the office of his employers, he heard Lee J. Williams talking to
Mr. B. F. Boykin testified as follows: “On December 5th or 7th—I have forgotten the date—Judge Boop, Mr. Stewart and myself went into the bank there to help collect these notes, and at the time we went in there this note sued on, signed by Ira W. and Lee J. Williams, with two or three more signed by Ira W. and Lee J. Williams, and one signed Ira and Felix,—on this particular note, we made an effort to get in touch with Lee Williams, and Ira Williams, and Lee Williams came down and promised to get his brother Ira down here and settle this note. In January he came to my office about a loan he was putting through, and he promised to get his brother down here and settle this note, and finally Ira and Lee came and they promised to settle this note. We have had a number of conversations with Lee Williams in the office and he promised to pay them, as he said, as soon as he could get Ira Williams down they would arrange them. When we sued this case Lee Williams acknowledged service in my office, and he said he would acknowledge service for Ira, that what one of them’ did the other would ratify it, and that it would save costs. He did not say anything at anytime before then about not signing this note. IJp until the time he acknowledged service he did not claim that the note was not signed by him and not his act and deed. I expect I saw him one hali dozen times in regard to this note, and every time he said he would get Ira down here and arrange it. Every conversation Was in regard to the note sued on and other notes sued upon. After suit was brought he did tell me that he did not sign the note sued on. He said Ira signed this note and got the money and that he did not sign it. He said that Ira and Newt Spence had some dealings about it. That was his claim after suit was brought. Hp until that time he always promised to renew
The foregoing evidence, in our opinion, entitled the plaintiff to the introduction of the note. See McLendon v. Shackleford, 32 Ga. 474.
“Acquiescence or silence, when the circumstances require an answer or denial or other conduct, may amount to an admission.” Civil Code (1910), § 5782; Holston v. Southern Railway Co., 116 Ga. 656 (2) (
There was no evidence whatsoever by the defendant, as the plaintiff, under the ruling of the court, was never able to shift the burden of the evidence. Of course, if the court had seen fit to admit the note in evidence, then the plaintiff would have had the burden of satisfying the jury by a preponderance of the evidence of the execution of the note as alleged. “Where a verified plea of non est factum has been filed, although slight evidence as to the execution of the paper in question may prevent a nonsuit and carry the case to the jury, yet when this slight evidence has been met by evidence to the contrary, then the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove the execution of the paper by a preponderance of the
We do not overlook the fact that in the testimony of Mr. Boykin it is stated that the defendant, after the suit was filed, told him that .he did not execute the note. It appears there had been several previous conversations in which Mr. Williams had promised to arrange the note, or renew it, without any statement as to whether he did or did not execute it. If there had been but one conversation, and in that he had denied the execution of the note, it may be that the plaintiff could not use against him his promise to arrange or renew the note without at the same time giving him the benefit of the denial of its execution made in the same connection, so that the effect of the admission would have been negatived by the contemporaneous denial or explanation. But this is not the ease as presented by the evidence. When he was presented with the note with a demand for payment, his failure to repudiate the genuineness of his signature “was evidence in the nature of an admission which might be considered as bearing upon the question whether he assumed the signature as his own, but it was not conclusive. Greenfield Bank v. Crafts,
Even if the evidence had been insufficient to authorize the introduction of the note, this would not have warranted a direction of a verdict in favor of the plea. In that case a proper disposition would have been a nonsuit. We hold, however, that in view of the plaintiff’s evidence the note was improperly excluded. This rendered erroneous the subsequent direction of the verdict in favor of the plea.
Judgment affirmed on the main hill of exceptions; reversed on the cross-hill.
