Giles v. PEACHTREE PANTRIES INC.
This text of 74 S.E.2d 545 (Giles v. PEACHTREE PANTRIES INC.) 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.
Opinion
In this receivership proceeding, and after a hearing at which the parties introduced evidence, the trial judge refused to assess any part of the costs against an intervenor who had a lien by security deed upon the property involved. The judge later assessed all of the costs against the plaintiffs and entered final judgment accordingly. Upon these rulings error is properly assigned. It is argued by the plaintiffs in error that the trial judge erred in so assessing the costs. In cases of this character, the judge is vested with a discretion which, when exercised, will not be controlled unless abused. Code, § 37-1105; Torras v. Raeburn & Verell, 108 Ga. 345 (7) (33 S. E. 989); Zachry v. *537 Industrial Loan & Investment Co., 182 Ga. 738 (186 S. E. 832); Wofford Oil Co. v. City of Atlanta, 183 Ga. 492 (188 S. E. 691). A determination of the question presented involves necessarily a consideration of the evidence; and questions involving a consideration of the evidence will not be considered by this court where the evidence is not properly brought up. Sayer v. Brown, 119 Ga. 539 (48 S. E. 649); Smith v. Zachry, 128 Ga. 290 (57 S. E. 513). Concerning the procedure to be employed in bringing evidence to this court for the review of litigation, it is a settled rule of practice in this State that the evidence must be brought up in the bill of exceptions or attached thereto as exhibits duly and properly identified by the trial judge or be embodied in an approved brief of the evidence and brought up as a part of the record. See Attaway v. Duncan, 206 Ga. 230 (1) (56 S. E. 2d, 269), and citations. In this case, after the judge’s certificate, there is attached to the bill of exceptions an exhibit which purports to be a brief of the evidence, but it is not identified or authenticated as such in any way by the trial judge; and following our very recent ruling in Cornett v. Justice, 209 Ga. 375 (72 S. E. 2d, 724), and the cases there cited, we must and do hold that the rule for bringing up evidence has not been complied with in the instant case; and, since the burden is on one asserting error to show it affirmatively by the record (Smith v. State, 203 Ga. 636, 47 S. E. 2d, 866), and this can be done in the case at bar only by a consideration of the evidence, we will assume that the judgment complained of is correct and affirm it. See, in this connection, Roberts v. City of Cairo, 133 Ga. 642, 644 (66 S. E. 938).
Judgment affirmed.
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74 S.E.2d 545, 209 Ga. 536, 1953 Ga. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-peachtree-pantries-inc-ga-1953.