Western & Atlantic Railroad v. State

69 Ga. 524
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 69 Ga. 524 (Western & Atlantic Railroad v. State) 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
Western & Atlantic Railroad v. State, 69 Ga. 524 (Ga. 1882).

Opinion

Tompkins, Judge.

This is an original petition for a writ of prohibition to be issued by this court, at the relation of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company against Hon. J. T. Willis, judge of the Chattahoochee circuit, to. prevent him from, proceeding with the trial, in Fulton superior'court, of a quo warranto proceeding brought to that court by the state of Georgia, ex relatione the attorney general of .this, state, to forfeit the charter of the company incorporated under the laws of Georgia as the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company. The facts connected with and leading up to the case before the court are as follows :

On the 24th of October, 1870, the general assembly of Georgia passed a law, entitled “an act to authorize the lease of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, and [526]*526for other purposes,” which said railroad running from Atlanta, in this state, to Chattanooga, in the state of Tennessee, was, and is, the property of the state of Georgia. On the 27th of December, 1870, the terms of the lease were agreed upon by the then governor of Georgia, and ■■twenty-three persons therein named, who became the lessees, “and said persons .then, and from that time, be■came a body politic and corporate, under the name and ■style of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company,” •the bond having been given and the other conditions of the lease act being complied with to the satisfaction of the governor. The lease to be in force for twenty years.

On the 28th of September, 1881, the general assembly of Georgia, by resolution, requested the governor to submit the bond given by the company, and all the papers and evidence connected therewith, or relating thereto, to the attorney general of the state, with instructions for him thoroughly to examine into the same, and report to the governor. This was done, and resulted in the said quo warranto proceedings being instituted in said superior court of Fulton county, on the 5th of August, 1882. The defendant in that proceeding, the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, being duly called on to show cause, appeared, and on the 23d of August, 1882, before the Hon. J. T. Willis, judge of the Chattahoochee circuit, (the judge of the Atlanta circuit being disqualified), made and filed a motion in writing to set aside the order in the nature of a rule nisi. After argument on this motion, the court, on the 24th of August, 1882, overruled it. The Western and Atlantic Railroad Company then filed its demurrer to the said quo warranto proceeding, on various grounds; and after argument, the demurrer was also overruled on the 26th of August, 1882. To the overruling of said demurrer, the said company, on the said 26th of August, 1882, made and tendered a bill of exceptions to such judgment, upon ■ the ground that if the demurrer had been sustained, it [527]*527would have been a final determination of the cause in favor of the defendants in the quo warranto case. The judge presiding refused to sign the bill of exceptions, but did sign a bill of exceptions pendente lite, which the defendant tendered in lieu of the bill of exceptions so refused to be signed. The judge then drew a jury to try the case, the defendants filed an answer, and the cause was put for trial on the 14th of September, 1882.

On the 14th of September, the said judge had concluded to sign the bill of exceptions before refused, and made the cause returnable to the February term, 1883, of this court. This bill of exceptions was then filed in the clerk’s office, bond was given by the defendant railroad company, in accordance with §4263 of the Code, to supersede the judgment below, and the case was duly sent up to this court within twenty days thereafter, where it is now pending, the clerk having put it for trial on the docket of the Atlanta circuit for this, the September term, 1882, on the 27th day of that month, some days after the term had begun.

The said judge, Hon. J. T. Willis, again set the quowarranto case down for trial, after having signed the bill of exceptions, the case to be heard on the 16th of October, 1882, on its merits, before a jury. To prevent that hearing, the railroad company came before this court on the 14th of October, 1882, and obtained a rule nisi prohibiting the hearing of the case in the superior court of Fulton county on the 16th of October, and calling on the said J. T. Willis, judge, etc., to show cause why the writ of prohibition should not issue as prayed for, and ordering that all further action on the quo warranto case in the court below be stayed until the hearing in this court upon the bill of exceptions filed to the overruling of the demurrer as aforesaid.

The said J. T. Willis, judge, etc., filed his answer in this court on the 16th of October, 1882, substantially admitting the facts as shown by the petition for writ [528]*528of prohibition, but expressing the opinion that the bill of exceptions to his judgment overruling the demurrer, tendered to him on the 26th August, and finally-signed by him on the 14th of September, 1882, ought not to have been signed, but that it was signed in order to give defendants in the quo warranto case the benefit of any doubt there might be ; and also expressing the opinion that no bill of exceptions, such as was tendered to him and finally signed by him, could, at that stage of the proceedings, have the legal effect to suspend or postpone the further hearing and trial of said cause.

No question has been made on either side as to any effect of the postponement of the signing of the bill of exceptions by the said judge; but it has been treated as if he had signed it the day it was tendered, which was the date of the overruling of the demurrer, and had been transmitted to this court within twenty days from that date.

This prohibition case coming on for argument, the counsel for respondent moved the court to dismiss the application upon two grounds: (1.) Because this court, as an appellate court, had no jurisdiction to hear and determine writs of prohibition. (2.) Because the bill of exceptions to the overruling of the demurrer to the quo warranto proceedings was obnoxious to the objections set forth against it in the answer of respondent; and, as it should be dismissed from this court, the application for prohibition must also go out of court. No ruling was made on these motions, and the court directed all the issues to be argued together. This has been most ably and carefully done by counsel on both sides; and the court has derived great advantage from the presentation of the cause by counsel, as it likewise has from the very elaborate and valuable written argument and brief of Mr. Julius L. Brown, of counsel for the relator.

The legal issues which are thus presented in this case will be considered in the following order:

[529]*529(1.) As to the jurisdiction of this court to issue and enforce writs of prohibition.

(2.) As to the right of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company to bring directly up to this court, by general bill of exceptions, the judgment overruling the demurrer to the proceeding for quo warranto \ and,

(3.) As incidental to this right, the proper disposition to be made of the bill of exceptions pending in this court, taken from the judgment on demurrer, if such bill of exceptions was improvidently granted by the respondent in the application for writ of prohibition.

1, 2, 3, 4.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Ga. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-atlantic-railroad-v-state-ga-1882.