Healey Real Estate & Improvement Co. v. Wilson

38 S.E.2d 747, 74 Ga. App. 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 13, 1946
Docket31276, 31277.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 38 S.E.2d 747 (Healey Real Estate & Improvement Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healey Real Estate & Improvement Co. v. Wilson, 38 S.E.2d 747, 74 Ga. App. 63 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Sutton, P. J.

This was a dispossessory-warrant proceeding in the Civil Court of Fulton County, based on an affidavit of the plaintiff, that (1) the defendant failed to pay the rent due, and (2) that the defendant was holding over and beyond the term for which the premises were rented or leased to him and had refused the demand of the owner to surrender possession of the same. The defendant filed a counter-affidavit, denying the allegations of the affidavit of the plaintiff, and a plea to the jurisdiction of the court. On the trial, the judge, trying the case without a jury, found against the plea to the jurisdiction, to ivhieh judgment the defendant excepted pendente lite. On the trial of the issues made by the dispossessory warrant and the counter-affidavit, the judge found in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff made an oral motion for a new trial, which it later abandoned in open court, and filed a written motion for a new trial, which it amended. The judge overruled the motion for a new trial, and the plaintiff excepted by direct bill of exceptions. The defendant, by cross-bill of exceptions, excepted to the judgment finding against his plea to the jurisdiction and overruling the motion to dismiss the plaintiff's motion for a new trial.

After the cases made by the bill and cross-bill of exceptions were filed and docketed in this court, the defendant filed a timely written motion in this court to dismiss the writ of error upon the ground *64 that a direct bill of exceptions would not lie from the Civil Court of Fulton County to the Court of Appeals from a judgment of the lower court in a dispossessory-warrant proceeding, and upon the further ground that the bill of exceptions was premature because the oral motion for a new trial, made by the plaintiff in the court below, had never been dismissed by that court but was still pending therein.

We think that the writ of error in the present case must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in this court to entertain it. While the Civil Court of Fulton County had jurisdiction to entertain and try the issues made by the dispossessory warrant and counter-affidavit thereto, there is no express authority for reviewing a judgment of that court in such proceeding by a direct bill of exceptions to this court. The act of March 10, 1933 (Ga. L. 1933, p. 290 et seq.), provides in part: “Section 42. Be it enacted . . that new trials may be granted in said court upon the same grounds upon which new trials may be granted in the superior courts of this State, and according to the same method of procedure, except as it may hereinafter be provided, (a) In all cases tried in said court . . upon the announcement of judgment in a case tried without a jury, any party to said cause or his counsel may make an oral motion for a new trial in said court, where the amount involved, exclusive of interest, attorneys fees, and costs, is less than three hundred dollars. . . (c) In all cases wherein the amount involved, exclusive of interest, attorneys fees, and cost, is less than three hundred dollars, an appeal shall lie from the order overruling or refusing the motion for a new trial or the final order or judgment of the trial judge, as the case may be, to the Appellate Division of said court; . . (h) In all cases wherein the amount involved, exclusive of interest, attorneys fees, and costs, is three hundred dollars or more, the order overruling or refusing the motion for new trial or the final order or judgment of the trial court, as the case may be, shall be subject to review by bill of exceptions to the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court, in the same manner judgments and orders of the superior courts are now reviewed, . . Section 42-C. Be it further enacted . . that whenever in this act the term 'amount involved, exclusive of interest, attorneys fees, and costs, is used, it shall be held to mean the principal amount sued for, or the value of the property sued for or claimed, or the *65 alleged amount of the lien sought to be enforced by the plaintiff, or the principal amount sued for, or the alleged value of the property sued for or claimed, or the alleged amount of the lien sought to be enforced by the defendant by setoff or counterclaim, in the event the amount of such setoff or counterclaim exceeds the amount sued for, or the alleged value of the property sued for or claimed, or the alleged amount of the lien sought to be enforced by the plaintiff.”.

The plaintiff in error contends that, at the time of the trial' in the court below, the evidence showed without dispute, that more than three hundred dollars was due the plaintiff as double rent on the premises sought to be recovered; and that, for' this reason, it had the right to appeal by direct bill of exceptions to the Court of Appeals from the judgment of the lower court overruling its amended motion for a new trial.

It was ruled by this court in Bloodworth v. Edwards, 69 Ga. App. 427, 428 (25 S. E. 2d, 831) that: “The object and purpose of a dispossessory-warrant proceeding is to obtain possession of the premises claimed to be unlawfully withheld. It is not a proceeding to collect rent, and the fact that the failure of the tenant to pay rent is alleged as the ground for issuing the dispossessory warrant does not change the situation. The amount of rent mentioned in the affidavit and warrant as being due, $13.20, does not fix the amount involved in the case.” In the present case, the affidavit upon which the .dispossessory warrant issued was made upon two distinct grounds, one of which was that the defendant failed to pay the rent then due, without designating any specific amount as being due; and the other was that the defendant was holding the premises over and beyond the term for which they were rented to him, and had refused the demand of the owner for the same.

The dispossessory-warrant proceeding was not instituted for the purpose of recovering rent from the defendant, but to recover possession of the premises from him; and the double rent sought to be recovered was not claimed by the landlord as a debt growing out of the original contractual relationship of landlord and tenant, but was claimed as incidental to the action and in the nature - of a penalty to be inflicted upon the tenant for unlawfully 'withholding the premises from the landlord after it had demanded possession of the same. Hamilton v. McCroskey, 112 Ga. 651 (37 S. E. 859); *66 Carter v. Sutton, 147 Ga. 496 (94 S. E. 760). A dispossessory warrant is a summary statutory proceeding by a landlord to obtain possession of premise's from his tenant, and its purpose, is not to collect rent claimed to be due but to determine the right of possession to the premises between landlord and tenant. Fitzgerald Trust Co. v. Shepard, 60 Ga. App. 674 (4 S. E. 2d, 689). The only money judgment which can be obtained by the landlord in such a proceeding is the statutory penalty of double rent, which is granted as an incident to the writ placing him in possession of the premises. Broadwell v. Maxwell, 35 Ga. App. 769 (4) (134 S. E. 808). Also see Frazier v. Beasley, 59 Ga. App. 500 (1 S. E. 2d, 458).

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.E.2d 747, 74 Ga. App. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healey-real-estate-improvement-co-v-wilson-gactapp-1946.