Baldwin v. Daniel

69 Ga. 782
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 69 Ga. 782 (Baldwin v. Daniel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Daniel, 69 Ga. 782 (Ga. 1883).

Opinions

Hall, Justice.

1, 2, 3. A motion was made to dismiss this writ of error.

(1). Because no notice of the rule nisi was served upon the party called on to show cause.

(2.) Because the grounds of the motion for a new trial were not verified by the judge.

(3.) Because the documentary evidence in the case was not set forth in the brief of testimony accompanying the motion for a new trial, and was not approved and ordered filed by the judge.

The record in the case does not sustain either of these grounds of objection.

The motion was made, and the rule nisi thereon granted required cause to be shown immediately, or so soon as counsel could be heard, and the motion was heard and disposed of at the same term of the court when the trial was had. The defendant's counsel, who was called upon to show cause, was present, as is shown by his agreement to the brief of testimony on the day the motion for a new trial was heard, and when the motion was overruled. He certainly appears to have taken part in the proceedings relating to the motion for a new trial, and his participation in such proceedings is sufficient to charge him with notice, or is evidence of a waiver thereof. True, no entry of service of notice appears upon the papers, nor is there any written waiver, and the Code, §3723, requires service of a copy of the rule nisi, unless it is waived ; but “its due service may be inferred from the appearance of the party or his counsel, and opposing the rule or arguing matters collateral to it, in a manner to indicate that the party must have been served, or must have waived service.” 21 Ga., 214, 216.

Moreover, it seems that the notice here referred to is dispensed with, if the motion is heard at the term when the trial is had, and is only necessary where the rule nisi is made returnable ”’to be heard in vacation, or at a subsequent term of the court. 21 Ga., 214, 215.

[787]*787It is apparent from the record that the grounds of the motion were examined and approved by the judge, for he modified and corrected the sixth ground of the motion, and certified the bill of exceptions to be true, and the motion for a new trial and the grounds are expressly “made a part of this bill of exceptions,”

The brief of the evidence in this case has upon it this agreement by counsel for the parties : “ That the within is a correct brief of evidence taken on the trial, and they agree that the original written evidence and interrogatories may be used for the purpose of this motion.” Signed by counsel, and dated December 26th, 1882, and on the same day, and immediately thereunder, is the following, signed by the presiding judge : “ Approved, and ordered filed in office.” The clerk’s entry shows that all the foregoing papers were “filed in office ” on that day. In the motion for a new trial, which was filed, heard and disposed of the same day, is a recital to the effect that it was accompanied by “ a copy of the written and a brief of the oral testimony adduced on the trial, agreed to by counsel and approved by the court.” And the bill of exceptions, signed and certified in four days thereafter, has this in reference to the brief of testimony, viz: that the same was “ perfected and approved by the court,” at the same time the motion was heard and determined. Along with this brief of the oral testimony, is a full copy of the interrogatories and the written evidence in the'case (except as to the letters patent of McNair to the plow-stock in question, the substance of which only is given, and which, upon a suggestion of a diminution of the record, it was agreed should be held and taken for the letters), and all of which is certified by the clerk as containing a complete transcript of the record in the case.

In support of this objection, the counsel cites the case in 60 Ga., 322, in which the court decided that, “in order for the brief of evidence to come up as a part of the record, under section 4253 of the Code, it must be approved [788]*788by the court in express terms, and such approval must be evidenced by an entry signed by the judge, or by a direct affirmation in the bill of exceptions. That while a presumptive or implied approval will serve for the court below to act upon, and also for this court to act upon where the evidence is embraced in the bill of exceptions, an express approval is requisite to render the brief a part of the record, and to identify and authenticate it as such in the transcript."

In this case, although the approval was written out upon the brief, it was not signed by the presiding judge, nor was the omission to sign it accounted for; neither was there any affirmation in the bill of exceptions that the brief had been approved. Whereas, in the case now under consideration, the approval was signed by the judge, and there is in -the bill of exceptions an express affirmation that the brief was “ perfected and approved” by the court. In the present case the documentary evidence appears as a part of the brief of the oral testimony, approved, and is not merely “ annexed ” thereto, as in the case just cited.

Nor do the cases cited from 66 Ga., 393 and 634, sustain the motion on this ground. The first does not bear upon the point at all; the clerk certified in that case that “the deeds referred to in the motion for a new trial and brief of evidence are not of file in said court.’’ The very reverse is certified, both by the judge and clerk, in this case. The last case cited, on account of its wide variance from this, does not control it. There the agreement of counsel was that certain original interrogatories should be used on the hearing, and sent up to this court as a part of the evidence in this case, and the court below approved the brief with an order that the clerk copy the interrogatories as a part of the evidence. What purported to be a copy of such interrogatories appeared in the record, detached and disconnected from the approved brief, and without further authentication by the presiding judge; whereas, in this case, there was no such order to the clerk to copy and send [789]*789up; the written evidence was not disconnected and detached from the approved brief of the oral testimony, and was authenticated by the presiding judge, both by his approval of the brief and the recital in the approved motion for a new trial; and as we have seen, in the bill of exceptions itself. We are unwilling to extend the principles of these cases further than is there laid down ; were we to do so we should feel that we were acting in opposition to the liberal practice enjoined by recent legislation. The motion to dismiss the writ of error is, therefore, denied.

4, 5, 6, 7, 8. This was a proceeding to foreclose a mortgage, brought by the assignee thereof, and of the notes it was made to secure.

The papers, which were made negotiable on their face, were assigned before due. The defence set up was failure of consideration, breach of alleged warranty, and fraud, of which it was claimed the plaintiff had notice.

The notes were given for the right to use in the state of Mississippi certain patented plow-stocks, of which McNair, the payee of the notes, was the inventor and proprietor.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Ga. 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-daniel-ga-1883.