Hendley v. Adams
This text of 59 S.E. 227 (Hendley v. Adams) 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
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
If this is to be classified with civil cases within the purview of the constitutional amendment referred to, is it a case which was carried to the superior court from the court of ordinary, within the intent and meaning of those words as there used? The confusion already mentioned arising from the inapplicability of terms suited to ordinary litigation to a habeas-corpus proceeding gives rise to this question. It has sometimes been said that the judge of the superior court, or of a city court, or the ordinary, when hearing a habeas-corpus case, is not exactly the superior court or city court •or court of ordinary, but is a sort of special court, which has now and then been termed a “habeas-corpus court.” Without discussing the cases in which- language of this character has been used, or the 'correctness of the decisions made in them, in view of the questions actually involved, it may be suggested that the law of this State has created no court known as “a habeas-corpus court.” It has conferred upon the judges of certain courts power to issue the writ and hear the case, but it has erected no distinct tribunal or set of tribunals for that purpose. If the ordinary, who is the judge of the court of ordinary, when hearing a habeas-corpus case, is not to be. treated as acting as the ordinary, it would seem that the same rule would apply to a judge of the superior court under like circumstances. If the judgment of the latter judge in a pro[521]*521ceecling of this character is not the judgment of a judge of the superior court, but of some special kind of tribunal, how is his judgment to be reviewed by this court at all? In Moore v. Ferrell, 1 Ga. 6, a motion was made to dismiss a writ of error, on the ground ihat exception was taken to the order of the judge of the superior corirt, dissolving an injunction at chambers, and that the Supreme Court possessed no jurisdiction over decisions made by judges of the superior court in vacation, because the act creating this court declared that “all causes of a criminal or civil nature, for alleged errors in any decision, sentence, judgment, or decree of •any superior court” might be carried up by bill of exceptions. But the motion was overruled. The point was practically determined in the case of Barranger v. Baum, 103 Ga. 465, 469. It was there held that “A writ of error will lie direct to this court from the decision of the judge of the city court of Richmond county in a habeas-corpus case.” The constitution at that time declared that “The Supreme Court shall have no original jurisdiction, but shall he a court alone for the trial and correction of errors from the -superior courts, and from the city courts of Atlanta and Savannah, and such other like courts as may be hereafter established in other ■cities.” In order to hold that a writ of error would lie from a decision of the judge of a city court to this court in a habeas-corpus sase, it was necessary to hold that the decision of the presiding judge in such a case was the action of the city court within the meaning of that provision of the constitution.
If the law is clear, inconvenience can not change it. But if the question before, us were doubtful, a different ruling from that now made would involve much confusion and uncertainty as to writs -of error in habeas-corpus cases. Sometimes they would be treated .as civil eases, and sometimes as criminal cases. Sometimes they would go from the superior court (in cases arising there or first heard by the ordinary) to the Court of Appeals, and sometimes come to this court. We do not think that it was the intention of this amendment to produce such a result.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
59 S.E. 227, 129 Ga. 518, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendley-v-adams-ga-1907.