Temple Baptist Church v. Georgia Terminal Co.

58 S.E. 157, 128 Ga. 669, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 11, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 58 S.E. 157 (Temple Baptist Church v. Georgia Terminal 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
Temple Baptist Church v. Georgia Terminal Co., 58 S.E. 157, 128 Ga. 669, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 186 (Ga. 1907).

Opinion

Cobb, P. J.

(After stating the facts.) The act establishing the Supreme Court of Georgia divided the State into five supreme judicial districts; and a term of court was held twice in each year in every district. The court sat at two places in each district, except the fifth, where all of its sessions were held at the seat of the government in the City of Milledgeville. In order to carry a ease to the Supreme Court it was necessary for the losing party to tender the bill of exceptions to the judge within four days after the trial. When the bill of exceptions was tendered, if true, the judge was required to certify the same. Within ten days thereafter notice was required to be served upon the opposite party or his counsel, and when such bill of exceptions and evidence of service were filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court, it was the duty of that officer to certify and send up to the Supreme Court a complete transcript of the entire record in the case within ten days after he received the original notice with a return of service thereon. Cobb’s Dig. 451; 1 Oa. VIII, IX. Provision was made by the rules of the court for writs of error, citation, assignments of error on the bill of exceptions, etc. Eule XIX et seq., 1 Oa. XVI et seq. The rules of court provided, “All cases returned to this court shall be entered on” the bench docket and numbered, on or before the court meets on the first day of the term to which they are respectively returned, and the cases first received by the clerk shall be first entered.” Eule VII, 1 Oa. XIV. It will be noted that it was by a rule of the court and not by statute that the Supreme Court first determined when the docket should be closed for the entry of cases for the term. The docket was closed on the first day of the term, and records and bills of exceptions thereafter received were docketed to the next term of the court. In 1855 an act was passed requiring the clerk of the Supreme Court to arrange the eases on the docket by circuits, and to give notice, by publication in a newspaper at the place where the court was to be held, of the order in which the circuits were arranged; it being also in this act provided that if a case reached the office of the clerk in time to be entered upon the docket before all the cases from that circuit were heard, the same should be construed as being docketed in [673]*673time for that term, and that error might be assigned and issue joined at any time before such case was called. Acts of 1855-6, p. 198. The several separate judicial districts of the State were abolished by the constitution of 1865, and the entire State was, in effect, declared to be one supreme judicial district, and the court was required to sit at the seat of the government at such time in each year as the General Assembly should prescribe. Code of 1868, §4961. In pursuance of this change made by the constitution in the act organizing the Supreme Court, the General Assembly, in 1866, passed an act providing that the sessions of the Supremo Court should be held at Milledgeville on the first Mondays of June and December in each and every year, and that such sessions should be continued until the business before the court should be disposed of. It was also provided that all bills of exceptions should be filed in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court at least twenty days before the commencement of the term at which the same were to be heard; and bills of exceptions filed within less ■^han twenty days should be docketed for the next succeeding term. Acts 1866, p. 46. The practice prescribed by this act, of making the case returnable to the term which began not less than twenty days from the time that the record or bill of exceptions was filed in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court, continued until 1890, when the decision in the case of Logan v. W. & A. R. Co., 86 Ga. 493, was rendered. In that case Mr. Chief Justice Bleckley, after reviewing the various statutes in reference to bringing cases to the Supremo Court, laid down the rule that the return term fixed by law for all ordinary bills of exceptions is' the first term which begins after, the expiration of thirty days from the filing of such bills of exceptions in the office of the clerk of the trial court. Under this rule the term to which a case was returnable was not fixed by the date' on which the record and bill of exceptions reached the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court, but b}1" the date on which the bill of exceptions was filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court. This was a decision by a unanimous court, and was followed in the case of Bank of Culloden v. Bank of Forsyth, 119 Ga. 351, which was also by a unanimous court. By an act approved October 28,1870, it was provided that if a case had been transmitted in time to reach the clerk of the Supreme Court twenty days before the first day of the term, and should fail [674]*674to so reach the clerk, either party, on the first day of the term, if the record had then arrived, might move the court to have it entered and heard in its order at that term, and if the court was satisfied that it was so transmitted in time, and if not so transmitted that it was by reason of some act of the defendant in error to produce delay, the motion should be granted. Acts of 1870, p. 46. On October 28, 1870, the very same day that the act last referred to was approved, another act was approved which provided that bills of exceptions in cases of applications for injunction should be tendered and signed within ten days from the date of the decision, and the opposite party be served within five da3's, and the clerk of the trial court, within five days from the date of service, was required to make a transcript of the record and transmit the same immediately to the Supreme Court then in session, and if not in session, then to the very next session; and its arrival by the first day of the term, or at a^r time thereafter during the term, was declared to be sufficient to ensure a hearing. If the record being returned to the court then in session should fail, after due diligence, to arrive in time for hearing before adjournment, then it should stand over until the next term. The clerk of the Supreme Court was required, immediately upon receipt of such case, to place the same upon the docket of the circuit to which it belonged, but, at the request of either party, the Supreme Court was required to hear the case without delay and without respect to the order of circuits, or the order in the circuits, unless some rule for a more speedy and systematic hearing of such cases was adopted in compliance with the spirit of. the act, giving them precedence. Acts of 1870, p. 405; Civil Code, §5558. This court had held that neither the granting of an ex parte application for an injunction at chambers, nor the dissolution of an injunction so granted, was such judgment, decision, or decree of the judge, heard at chambers, as to authorize a writ of error to this court while the case was pending in the trial court. Johnson v. Stewart, 40 Ga. 167; Nacoochee Mining Co. v. Davis, 40 Ga. 309. These decisions were rendered in 1869, and the act of 1870 was evidently passed by the General Assembly to remedy the defect then existing in the law with reference to the hearing of such applications by the Supreme Court. The effect of this act was, so far as applications for injunction were concerned, to allow a party [675]*675to the case in the trial court to bring under review by the Supreme Court a mere interlocutory decision of the judge.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.E. 157, 128 Ga. 669, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-baptist-church-v-georgia-terminal-co-ga-1907.