D. F. Wright filed a motion, addressed to the discretion of the court below, the purpose of which was to vacate a judgment previously rendered during the same term, whereby his action was dismissed on the ground that the costs in a former suit for the same cause, which he had voluntarily dismissed, had not been paid before the renewal suit was filed. The facts upon which this motion was predicated were all admitted by S. N. Jett, the opposite party, and the questions raised by the motion were submitted to the court for determination without the intervention of a jury.
It appears that on’July 21, 1902, Wright filed in the superior court of Fulton county a suit against Jett, returnable to the September term of that court. On August 12, 1902, the defendant filed a general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition, on the ground
What is said immediately above disposes also of the following grounds of the plaintiffs motion to vacate the judgment dismissing his action: (1) because the defendant did not give to the plaintiff notice of the filing of the plea in abatement; (2) because the defendant did not sooner move to have a hearing on that |>lea; (3) because the defendant waived his right to insist thereon by invoking a ruling of the trial court upon his demurrers, excepting to its judgment thereon, and taking the case to the Supreme Court, before pressing his plea in abatement to a trial on its merits.
The evident intent o'f our statute is to prevent the harassing renewal of a suit which the plaintiff has, after calling upon the defendant to appear in court and. defend it, elected to dismiss for some reason, good or otherwise. And the condition impos'ed upon him as to the payment of costs, before renewing his action, is in the nature of a penalty for not being ready and willing to press his original suit to a hearing on its merits. The expense incurred in bringing the dismissed action is thus thrown upon the plaintiff, and the costs thereof can not be recovered by him from the defendant, even though the former may, upon a final determination of his second suit, prevail in the cause. In other words, a plaintiff may arbitrarily and over the protest of the defendant dismiss a suit, his reasons for dismissing it can not be inquired into by the court; but he must in any event pay for this privilege, and can not, without first making payment of the costs of that suit, exercise his conditional statutory right to renew it. The statute under consideration may be analogized to that provision of our law (Civil Code, § 5094) .whereby a plaintiff is prevented from harassing his adversary by bringing and simultaneously maintaining against him two or more suits for the same cause of action; for that statute, also, has in view the protection of a defendant against unreasonable harassment, expense, and annoyance. And the decision announced in Johnson v. Railway Co., supra, is in line with that rendered by this court in the case of Singer v. Scott, 44 Ga. 659, wherein it was held: “Impending a suit, another be brought against the same defendant for the same cause of action, the pendency of the first suit may be pleaded in abatement of the second, and the plaintiff can not defeat the plea by dismissing the suit first brought.”
The decisions of this court as to the meaning of the statute providing for the payment of costs in a case where the losing party in the trial court exercises his right of appeal are not out of harmony with what is now ruled. When an appeal is taken the suit is in no sense discontinued, and the exaction as to payment of costs is for the benefit of the officers of the court from which
Judgment affirmed.