Perry v. Tumlin

131 S.E. 70, 161 Ga. 392, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 17, 1925
DocketNo. 4720
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 131 S.E. 70 (Perry v. Tumlin) 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
Perry v. Tumlin, 131 S.E. 70, 161 Ga. 392, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 363 (Ga. 1925).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

In our opinion the first question must be answered in the affirmative. Abbreviating the inquiry, the question may be stated as one whether on the review of a case in which two judges at different times and at different stages participate in the adjudication, must verification of the proceedings in the trial court be confined to the judge who presided at the rendition of the final judgment, or may not a different judge, who presided upon the investigation of some preliminary or interlocutory question, verify the history of that portion of the proceedings in the trial court in which the judge who finally presided did not participate and with relation to which he was therefore not prepared to certify? In other words, we hold that the failure of the judge who rendered the final judgment to certify the allegations of a petition for certiorari with respect to antecedent rulings may be supplied by the verification of the judge who made the antecedent rulings in an answer filed by him admitting that the allegations of the petition with respect thereto are true. In Marchman v. Todd, 15 Ga. 25, it was held that “Where a certiorari is granted to review the proceedings of an inferior judicatory, all the magistrates who presided on the trial should answer the certiorari.” At first blush this ruling would seem to be but little in point on the question now before us, for the Marchman case related to a certiorari from one of the inferior courts of this State, which, as is well known, consisted of five justices; and we might infer that an answer from all of the justices who presided at the trial was required for the purpose of informing the reviewing court that the judgment rendered was in fact a judgment of the majority of the court. However, the court did not place its ruling upon that ground. In the seventh division of the opinion, written by Judge Lumpkin, he said: “In eases like this, all the magistrates who presided on the trial below should answer the certiorari. It is not a mere transcript of the record that is sent up; but, like a bill of exceptions in this court, the certiorari and return are intended to supply those facts which do not appear of record. Some of these might be remembered by some of the magistrates, which are not recollected by the rest.” So we see that the real ground upon which the decision embodied in the seventh headnote rests is the propriety or right of each magistrate to verify what he may remember better than some other member or members of the court. And upon the same principle, in the trial of a ease at one stage [396]*396the judge who presided at that time not only would remember better than a judge who was not present, but he would be the only one of the two judges who could remember it at all, or who would know what transpired at that stage of the case. We think the point is controlled by the ruling of this court in Hall County v. Gilmer, 123 Co, 173 (51 S. E. 307), in which the writer, then a judge of the superior court, presiding for Judge Kimsey in Hall superior court, certified exceptions pendente lite to a judgment overruling a demurrer to the petition, and at the termination of the ease Judge Kimsey, having thereafter overruled exceptions of law to the report of an auditor, certified the main bill of exceptions, including the exceptions pendente lite previously certified in his absence, but which appeared from the record. This court approved the practice in that case, and held: “Where exceptions pendente lite are filed to the overruling of a demurrer, and are duly certified by the judge whose ruling is complained of, and are entered of record, no further certificate by the judge as to that ruling is required.” Likewise we say in this case, that, the answer of Judge Pettigrew of the municipal court having verified the allegations of the petition as to the judgment upon the plea to the jurisdiction, no further verification as to that point was required. It is immaterial that Judge Ridley, who presided when the final judgment was rendered in this case, was unable to certify as to what occurred before Judge Pettigrew, because under the ruling in the Mall County case, supra, Judge Pettigrew having verified what Judge Ridley could not, “no further certificate by the judge as to that ruling is required.” tIn Cutts v. Scandrett, 108 Ga. 620 (34 S. E. 186), Judge Eelton of the Macon circuit, and Judge Butt of the Chattahoochee circuit, each presided at different stages of the trial. Judge Eelton overruled a demurrer to a petition for an information in the nature of a quo warranto, and found adversely to the contention of the defendant set up by a plea to the jurisdiction on the ground that Judge Littlejohn, judge of the superior court of Dooly county, was not in fact disqualified, and that therefore the judge of the superior court of the Macon circuit had no jurisdiction. Judge Butt overruled a similar plea and °a similar demurrer to those presented to" Judge Eelton, and also overruled a motion for a new trial in the ease. A motion to dismiss the writ of error was made in this court on the ground, among [397]*397others, that the errors complained of in the bill of exceptions consisted of rulings made by two judges, to wit, Judge Felton and Judge Butt, and that the rulings of the court were not certified in the proper manner. In passing upon this question Judge Lewis, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “There is no authority of law, where two judges have presided at different times in the trial of different branches of the same case, for this court to review the rulings of one under a bill of exceptions based upon the certificate of the other. It does not necessarily follow, however, from this that the party complaining of errors made by the presiding judge on a preliminary hearing in a quo warranto ease is without any remedy to have such rulings reviewed by this court. In such a case we see no reason why exceptions pendente lite could not be filed and duly certified, as the law requires, by the judge whose decisions are excepted to, and after a final determination of the case, when the same is brought for review before this court under a general bill of exceptions, the errors assigned in the exceptions pendente lite could not be considered and passed upon by this court as is usual in all such cases. It is true that in the decision cited above [Western & Atlantic Railroad v. State of Georgia, 69 Ga. 524] it was held that it was not necessary for exceptions pendente lite to be filed complaining of any rulings of the court that might be made during the progress of the trial of such a case. But the court nowhere in that decision intimates that a party has not the right to file such exceptions, and thus make them a part of the record, before the final termination of the cause. In that case there was but one judge who had presided below throughout the proceedings, and the court evidently did not contemplate applying the principle it decided to a case where the rulings of two judges, made at different times in the progress of the trial, were sought to be reviewed before this court. We do not think, therefore, that the principle announced by the court can be fairly applied to the facts in this case, especially as the application of such principle would be in violation of a special statute touching the jurisdiction of this court in passing upon assignments of error set forth in a bill of exceptions not certified by the judge whose rulings and decisions are complained of. But simply because the bill of exceptions in this case has embodied therein the rulings of Judge Felton and those of Judge Butt, and [398]

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.E. 70, 161 Ga. 392, 1925 Ga. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-tumlin-ga-1925.