Meridian & M. Ry. Co. v. Betbeze
Meridian & M. Ry. Co. v. Betbeze
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On January 10, 1914, the appellant company instituted eminent domain proceedings against the appellee, the owner of certain property in Meridian, Miss., and the Georgia State Savings Association, of Savannah, Ga., ' which held a mortgage on the property sought to be condemned. The writ was issued by the circuit clerk, and made returnable on January 20, 1914, and a special court convened on that day. The attorneys for the appellant were not satisfied with the sufficiency of the service had upon the Georgia State Savings Association, and therefore dismissed the entire suit.
After the dismissal of the above-mentioned suit, the present suit was instituted by L. Betbeze, Sr., the appellee, in the circuit court of Lauderdale county, to recover for expenses incurred by him in defending the said suit; his suit being brought under provisions of section 1877, Code of 1906. This Code section is as follows:
“Defendant to Have Right of Action for Additional Damages in Certain Cases. — In case the plaintiff shall fail to pay the damages and costs awarded to the defendant within ninety days from the date of the rendering of the final judgment, if such judgment is not appealed from, or within ninety days after the affirmance of such final judgment on appeal, or in case the suit shall be dismissed by the plaintiff, or the judgment be that the
Another suit against the same defendants, to condemn the identical property, was within a short time after the dismissal of the first suit filed by the appellant, and it is insisted that:
The “dismissal referred to in section 1877 of the Code of 1906> means an abandonment of the condemnation proceedings, and that the statute does not apply where, because of failure to obtain sufficient service on a party defendant, the plaintiff dismisses its own suit with an intention to.institute a second proceeding.”
And appellant set up, by way of affirmative matter under the plea of the general issue, that it had dismissed the first eminent domain proceeding because the Georgia State Savings Association had not been legally summoned, and that it had dismissed said suit in order to bring another suit, so that all parties having an interest in said land could be made defendants in said eminent domain suit, and that said suit had already been brought by the defendant and is pending in the eminent domain court, with all the parties having an interest in the suit made defendants therein. The appellee thereupon filed a motion to strike said notice of affirmative matter under the general issue from the files, as not constituting a defense. This motion was sustained, and upon the action of the court in sustaining this motion the appellant relies for a reversal of this case.
The affirmative matter set out under the plea of the general issue presented no defense to this suit and was rightfully stricken out. Under the plain and unambiguous language of the statute, appellant became liable for the expense incurred by the defendant in the eminent domain proceedings when it ■ dismissed its suit.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.