Singer Sewing Machine Co. v. Rosenberg
This text of 111 S.E. 925 (Singer Sewing Machine Co. v. Rosenberg) 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.
Opinion
1. “ Attached to the original petition was the form of a process, but with no signature of the clerk thereto. To the copy of the petition which was served upon the defendant was attached a complete process duly signed.” “ The defect in the process attached to the original petition was amendable, and might be cured by the clerk’s attaching his signature thereto nunc pro tunc.” Myers v. Griner, 120 Ga. 723 (2), 725 (48 S. E. 113). In the instant case the sole question, under the agreement of counsel, was whether the previous judgment pleaded by the defendant and collaterally attacked by the plaintiff was “ a legal and binding judgment as it stood.” It is controlled by the case cited above. Even could the petition in the former case have been dismissed pending that proceeding, as was done in Rowland v. Towns, 120 Ga. 74 (47 S. E. 581), and even could the former judgment have been set aside in a proper proceeding instituted for that purpose, the instant attack upon that judgment is not such a motion or proceeding. The defect in the original process being curable by amendment, the former [425]*425judgment was not void on its face, but “ as it stood ” was legal and binding.
[425]*425(a) The fact that the original and copy process, although made returnable to the September “ B ” term of the municipal court of Atlanta, beginning the third Monday in September, was directed by the court to be amended and made returnable to the October “ A ” term, beginning the first Monday in October, and that such process was not served on the defendant until October 1, or less than the required number of days ' before the October “ A ” term, did not render void the judgment subsequently taken against the defendant on October 26, during the following October “ B ” term, beginning the third Monday in October. “ Service. effected too late for a particular term shall be good for the next succeeding term thereafter.” Act creating municipal court of Atlanta, see. 36 (Ga. L. 1913, p. 162); Civil Code (1910), § 5570. See also Baker v. Thompson, 75 Ga. 164, in which the facts relating to process and service were similar. The failure to serve the defendant with a copy of the court’s order, making the original suit and process returnable to a later term, was a mere irregularity not affecting the validity of the judgment as it stood.
2. Eor the reasons stated, it was error to sustain the certiorari from the ruling of the municipal court sustaining the plea of res judicata, which set up the former judgment as a bar to plaintiff’s recovery in the instant ease. -Judgment reversed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
111 S.E. 925, 28 Ga. App. 424, 1922 Ga. App. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-sewing-machine-co-v-rosenberg-gactapp-1922.