Seagraves v. Powell Co.

85 S.E. 760, 143 Ga. 572, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 531
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 23, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 85 S.E. 760 (Seagraves v. Powell Co.) 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
Seagraves v. Powell Co., 85 S.E. 760, 143 Ga. 572, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 531 (Ga. 1915).

Opinion

Lumpkin, J.

An application was made .to the court of ordinary to set aside a discharge granted to an administrator, which it was alleged had been obtained by falsely and fraudulently representing to the ordinary that the administrator had fully discharged all of his duties as such. The ordinary sustained a demurrer to the [574]*574petition, and the petitioner obtained a writ of certiorari. A motion was made to dismiss the certiorari proceedings. It was overruled; and the presiding judge held that it was error to sustain the demurrer to the petition to set aside the judgment of discharge, and remanded the case for a trial on the^ facts. The defendant in certiorari excepted.

1. One ground of the motion to dismiss the certiorari proceedings was because the application for certiorari was not filed in the clerk’s office within the time allowed by law. The judgment sustaining the demurrer was rendered by the ordinary on November 19, 1913. The application for certiorari was’ sanctioned on November 29th. There is no entry of filing in the record; but the writ of certiorari was dated January 2, 1914, showing that the papers were in the hands of the clerk by that date. The contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error was that it was necessary for the application to be filed in the clerk’s office within thirty days from the date of the judgment complained of. This contention involves a glance at the legislation and decisions bearing on the point raised. In the judiciary act of 1799, it was provided that if a party should take exceptions to any proceedings in a cause in an inferior court, and they should be overruled, it should be lawful for the dissatisfied party, “on giving twenty days notice to the opposite party or his attorney, to apply to one of the judges of the superior court, and if such judge shall deem the said exceptions to be sufficient, he shall forthwith issue a writ of certiorari.” Cobb’s Digest, 523. By the act of December 29, 1838, it was declared that it should not be lawful for any judge to sanction or grant a writ of certiorari, “unless such .writ of certiorari shall be applied for within the term of six months next after the ease has been determined in the court below.” Cobb’s Digest, 528. The act of February 21, 1850, contained the first express reference to filing. It provided that it should be lawful for either party in a justice’s court, who might be dissatisfied with the judgment, “to apply for and obtain a certiorari on complying with the requisitions heretofore prescribed by law, . . and on being filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court, it shall be his duty to issue the writ,” which should be returnable to the next term of court sitting twenty days after the issuing; thereof. Cobb’s Dig. 529. On March 5, 1856,. a general law in regard to the limitations of actions [575]*575was passed. By the. sixteenth section it was declared that “all writs of certiorari shall be allowed and brought within six months from the time [the] judgment sought to be reversed was rendered.” Acts 1855-6, pp. 333, 334. By the act of December 11, 1858, the act of December 29, 1838, was so amended as to require parties desiring writs of certiorari “to apply for the same” within three months after the final determination of the case in the justice’s court. Acts 1838, p. 88. The sixteenth section of the act of 1856 appeared in the first code (which took effect on January 1, 1863) as section 2861. Here the words are, “shall be allowed and brought within three months.” Several acts on the subject of writs of certiorari and the manner of applying for and issuing them, serving notice, etc., were codified in section 3958 et seq. Section 3965 states that “all writs of certiorari shall be applied for within three months after the final determination of the case,” and shall be made returnable to the next superior court sitting not less than twenty days after the issuing of the writ. It will be seen that the section last cited was derived from several acts in reference to the practice in regard to writs of certiorari, and the provision of that section on the subject of time was codified from the act of 1838 as amended by the act of 1858, without reference to the limitation act of 1856; while the section first cited was taken from that act. The code, containing both of these sections, was adopted, and they were carried forward in later codes, appearing in the Codes of 1873 and 1882 as section 2920 and section 4057. On November 12, 1889, an act was approved which amended section 4057 of the Code of 1882, by changing the words, shall be applied for “in three months” after the termination of the case, so as to read “in thirty days.” No reference was made to the other section, taken from the act of 1856, which declared that the writ must be “allowed and brought” within three months. In the Code of 1895, for some reason, the words “and brought,” appearing in section 2920 of the Code of 1882, were omitted, and the corresponding section of the Code of 1895 (§ 3771) declares that the writ shall be “allowed” within three months; and the same is true of the Code of 1910, § 4365. The other provisions still stood in the Code of 1895 as section 4642, and in the Code of 1910 as section 5188. It will thus be seen that two provisions have long coexisted, one requiring that the writ shall be “applied for” in thirty days, the other that it [576]*576shall he “allowed and brought” (or “allowed” in the last two codes) in three months.

Let us now look at some of the decisions on the subject. Jones v. Smith, 28 Ga. 41, was decided in 1859, while the act of 1856, employing the words “allowed and brought,” and the act of 1858, amending the act of 1838 and using the words “applied for,” both stood, but had not been codified. It was held, that where a trial took place in a justice’s court on November 27, 1857, and the petition for certiorari was filed on May 28, 1858, it was not applied for within six months of the former date. There was no discussion as to the meaning of the words “applied for,” but only as to the mode of computing a limitation of six months. Nothing was said as to when the petition was sanctioned. In Barrett & Carswell v. Devine, 60 Ga. 632, decided in 1878, it was held that a writ of certiorari was not “brought,” within the meaning of section 2920 of the Code of 1873, until filed in the clerk’s office. Warner, C. J., said: “A writ of certiorari is merely the judicial means of enforcing a right, and must not only be allowed to be brought by the sanction of the judge, but must actually be brought within three months after the rendition of the judgment sought to be reversed.” This showed that emphasis was laid on the language which required something more than the sanctioning of the writ to be done in three months. See also Fuller v. Arnold, 64 Ga. 599 (3); Shaw v. Griffin, 65 Ga. 304; Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Carson, 70 Ga. 388; Johnson v. State, 69 Ga. 732; Hilt v. Young, 116 Ga. 708, 710 (43 S. E. 76). In Carson v. Mayor etc. of Forsyth, 97 Ga. 258 (22 S. E. 955), decided in August, 1895, it was held: “Under section 4057 of the code, as amended by the act of 1889 (Acts of 1889, p.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.E. 760, 143 Ga. 572, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seagraves-v-powell-co-ga-1915.