52 Ga. App. 388 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
This was a petition with a rule nisi to foreclose an attorney’s lien against real estate, under the statutory procedure analogous to the foreclosure of a mortgage on real estate. The lien was recorded on August 27, 1932. The petition and a second original were filed on August 18,- 1933, and the rule nisi was signed by the judge on August 19, 1933. This was made answerable, as provided by the statute, on the first day of the next term, beginning the fourth Monday in November, 1933. The rule nisi provided that “service of this rule be perfected on said [two defendants] as provided by law by second original or publication.” The defendant, now excepting to the procedure, who resided in DeKalb County, was served on August 28, 1933, “personally with a copy of the within petition and order.” On November 27, 1933, that defendant filed a traverse of the officer’s return of service, and a plea in abatement, attacking the return and the jurisdiction of the court, on the ground that the process and purported service were defective and illegal, because the copy of the rule nisi served had not been certified by the clerk of the court.' On the same date, the defendant filed general and special demurrers and an answer to the merits of the petition, reciting that both pleadings were filed without waiving his traverse or plea in abatement. On February 3, 1934, before adjournment of the November term, 1933, on ex parte motion by the plaintiffs, the judge signed an amended rule nisi, setting forth the previous procedure, the service of the copy of the original rule nisi, and the contention of the plea that it was void and á nullity, and ordering that the original rule nisi and the
1. “Void process may not be amended, nor, in the absence of waiver, may process be supplied.” Code of 1933, § 81-1313. But “No technical or formal objections shall invalidate any process; but if the same shall substantially conform to the requisites of this Code, and the defendant has had notice of the pendency of the cause, all other objections shall be disregarded: Provided, a legal cause of action as required by this Code is set forth.” § 81-220. “A proceeding to foreclose an attorney’s lien upon real property is to be brought as is a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage upon land, . . the process is a rule nisi issued by the court, and not a process issued by the clerk as in ordinary cases.” Moss v. Strickland, 138 Ga. 539, 541 (75 S. E. 622); McCalla v. Nichols,
2. Where there is a total absence of a rule nisi in a mortgage foreclosure, as with a total absence of legal process in an ordinary suit, or where the plaintiff or his attorney has been guilty of laches in correcting amendable imperfections in the process or service until after the return term, the suit fails, and the mere filing of the petition will not suffice to authorize the action to be treated as commenced and pending. But where valid process has been issued with a suit setting out a cause of action, and there has been no sufficient service through no fault or laches of the plaintiff or his attorney, the judge may by order provide for the correction of any mere irregularity in the process or service; and after the perfection of service, even though subsequent to the return term, such
The defendant having been duly served, if not at first, in any event by the final service, and such service relating to the date of filing the petition, which was within the statutory period of limitation following the record of the lien, the foreclosure proceedings were not'barred; and the court did not err in denying the motion to dismiss the action on this ground.
Judgment affirmed.