When an action was brought against David G. Black, alleging that the defendant "on or about August 7, 1962, at approximately 10:55 a.m. . . . driving his 1960 Ford Falcon station wagon, made a left turn off of Peachtree Street, traveling south on Peachtree, on to Buckhead Avenue, traveling east on Buckhead Avenue," and negligently ran into and knocked down the plaintiff; and process was served on a person named David G. Black, and thereafter the trial court allowed an amendment to the petition to add "Junior" after the name of the defendant, the trial court did not err in dismissing objections filed by David G. Black, Jr., to the amendment on the ground that its purpose was to add a new party defendant. David G. Black, Jr., appeals from the judgment of the trial court dismissing his objections to the amendment. The objector contends that the trial court should have allowed him to present evidence in support of the contention of his objections that the action was commenced against David G. Black, a person residing at the address where the process was served on David G. Black, and that the purpose of the amendment was to make David G. Black, Jr., the objector, a new party to the case. Justice Bleckley said in Minor v. State, 63 Ga. 318, 320, that the great office and purpose of a name is to suggest the right person. "If it is in common and familiar use, and stands to the mind as a sign or index of the person signified, what it wants in other respects is of no practical consequence." Accord Hayes v. State, 58 Ga. 35, 45; Wilson v. State, 69 Ga. 224, 234. Obviously, a suit is brought against a person not against a name designating that person. Whether the person who was served after the amendment, and who filed the objections praying that the amendment be disallowed, was in fact the person who owned and drove the automobile as alleged in the petition is a matter of affirmative defense and a question of fact. Jernigan v. Carter, 60 Ga. 131, 132, supra. The only way we can conceive of, by which the objector could prove this contention is by evidence showing that a person other than himself was the person sued and referred to in the petition as the owner and driver of a 1960 Ford Falcon station wagon involved in the collision at the time and place described in the petition. Facts showing that the objector was not that person do not appear in the petition or the amendment, or in the objections to the amendment. The objections only show the facts that there is another person besides the objector with the name David G. Black, and that person has been served with process. The objections alleged the conclusion that the person originally served was the person sued and that the purpose of the amendment was to make the objector, who was served after the amendment, a new party to the case. This conclusion does not follow from the facts shown. Decisions relied on by the objector, to the effect that an amendment considered in the case was an attempt to add a new party, are not controlling. See White v. Brown, 10 Ga. App. 530 (73 SE 853) (defendant against whom process was prayed was solicitor of city court; amendment praying for process to Governor would add a new party); McGowan v. Speed Oil Co., 94 Ga. App. 35 (93 SE2d 597) (records judicially noticed showed there existed a corporation with name by which defendant was designated, and against whom plaintiff admitted she had no cause of action; suit not amendable to name a district corporation as the defendant); Stewart v. Dearing Chevrolet Co., 110 Ga. App. 521, 526 ( 139 SE2d 148) (amendment seeking to substitute named corporation for individuals named as defendants in original petition would add a new party). The trial court properly allowed the amendment and did not err in dismissing the objections. |