Weaver v. Carter

28 S.E. 869, 101 Ga. 206, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 20, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 869 (Weaver v. Carter) 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
Weaver v. Carter, 28 S.E. 869, 101 Ga. 206, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 196 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

The right of a court to receive a verdict on Sunday and the legality of such action is, in my opinion, demonstrated in the case of Henderson v. Reynolds, 84 Ga. 159, and the authorities there cited. Other decisions might be cited, made since the case above mentioned was decided, but I deem it unnecessary to encumber the records with them. The doctrine seems now to be almost universal in this country. Besides, this court, composed of the writer and Justices Lumpkin and Atkinson, has approved the decision made in the case of Henderson v. Reynolds by the decision in the case of Bernstein v. Myers, 99 Ga. 90, s. c. 24 S. E. Rep. 854.

It is now contended, that although this court has decided in the two cases mentioned that a verdict can be legally received on the Sabbath day, it is not the law of this State, because the court, in the case of Bass v. Irvin, 49 Ga. 436. decided that a verdict so received was illegal and void, and that this court could not overrule that case without having it reviewed in accordance with section 5588 of the Civil Code, which is as follows: “A decision concurred in by three judges can not he reversed or materially changed, except by a full bench, and then after argument had, in which the decision, by permission of the court, is expressly questioned and reviewed; and after such argument, the court in its decision shall state distinctly whether it affirms, reverses or changes such decision.” This section applied when the decisions in Henderson v. Reynolds and in Bernstein v. Myers were made, [208]*208and the court was then composed of but three Justices. Since the court has been increased to six, the same rule applies except that it requires five Justices to reverse or overrule a previous decision made by a bench of three. So it appears that, at the time of the decision in Henderson v. Reynolds, a prior decision by three Justices could not be reversed unless it had been reviewed as required by the above section of the code. To all of this I fully agree. The decision in Henderson v. Reynolds was made with a full knowledge of this section of the code. In that decision Bass v. Irvin was expressly referred to. It was admitted that the reasoning of the court in that case was in conflict with the views announced in Henderson v. Reynolds, as well as in conflict with all the other authorities; but it was said by the court that it was not necessary in Bass v. Irvin for the court to have gone as far as it did in its reasoning upon this question. In Bass v. Irvin a verdict was returned upon the wrong paper and no judgment entered up thereon. A motion was made to transfer the verdict to the proper paper and to enter up judgment nunc pro tunc, and a rule nisi was issued calling upon the defendant to show cause why this motion should not be granted. He showed for cause that no legal verdict was rendered in the case, because it had been returned on Sunday in the absence and without the consent of the defendant; and we said in the case of Henderson v. Reynolds that the decision of this court in Bass v. Irvin was pei’haps correct; that the trial judge had no right on Sunday and in the absence and without the consent of one of the parties to receive the verdict; that the parties had a right to be present when the verdict was received; and added: “This court as now constituted would follow that case under an exactly similar state of facts, unless we were called upon to review it; but we would not feel bound by all of the reasoning of the decision.” Here then is a decision of this court, concurred in by three Justices, in which it was held that it was not necessary for the court to go as far as it did in its reasoning upon this question. This was the unanimous judgment of the court, that Bass v. Irvin was not controlling upon the question of the.reception of a verdict on [209]*209Sunday. That decision, whether right or wrong, has the same binding force upon subsequent members of the court as is given any unanimous decision of the court by the above cited section of the code. It does not reverse Bass v. Irvin, but simply holds that under the facts of that case it was not necessary to decide what was decided therein. The course pursued by the court in Henderson v. Reynolds has been, as far as I can ascertain, the one uniformly pursued since the passage of the act of 1858, now codified as section 5588 of the Civil Code. It has been the practice of the court, where a case has been erroneously decided upon a question of law, either to have it reviewed and then overrule it, or, if the same question arises again under a different state of facts, however small the difference may be, to decide differently and distinguish the case decided from the previous one, or in some other way to modify or throw doubt upon it. Whenever this has been done, the later case has been followed by the court and the profession as the true law upon the question. Numerous cases could be cited from our reports in which this has been ■ done. I will content myself with citing a few of them.

In the case of Roseberry v. Roseberry, 31 Ga. 122, it was held that in the trial of a possessory warrant, if the magistrate decided that the defendant was entitled to the .property it should be delivered to him upon his giving bond as the statute required. In the case of Bush v. Rawlins, 80 Ga. 586, it was held by this court that where the property was adjudged to be that of the defendant in the possessory warrant, it was not necessary, under the statute, for him to give a bond; and the court in discussing that question said: “We are aware that in the headnote to the case of Roseberry v. Roseberry, 31 Ga. 122, a different view is announced, but the facts of that case show that the point was not made in the case, and it was not necessary to decide the question.”

In the case of Weitman v. Thiot, 64 Ga. 16, this court, in ruling upon the statute of limitations as laid down in section 2928 of the Code of 1882, held that it applied to the estates of debtors as well as of creditors. In the case of Pendleton v. Andrews, 70 Ga. 306, the court construed the section differ[210]*210ently, and in the case of Johnson v. Johnson, 80 Ga. 260, the case of Pendleton v. Andrews, supra, was followed, Bleckley, C. J., saying that the later construction of the section “is undoubtedly correct; and that on which the court acted in ruling Weitman v. Thiot, 64 Ga. 16, is manifestly erroneous.”

In the case of Banks v. Hunt, 70 Ga. 741, the court held by way of argument that when the wages of a day-laborer were garnished, it was the duty of the garnishee to pay the fund into court, and that until this was done the question of exemption would not arise. In the case of Emmons, McKee & Co. v. So. Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 80 Ga. 763, it was held that the employer is not bound to pay the fund into court, but that it is his duty to pay it to the laborer even though he had been garnished; and that either the laborer or the garnishee could, after the money was paid to the laborer, assert that it was not subject to garnishment.

In the case of Hall v.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 869, 101 Ga. 206, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-carter-ga-1897.