1 Ga. App. 332 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The defendant in error has filed a motion to dismiss the writ of error; and as this motion, if sustained, will dispose of the case, we will consider it first. The first ground of the motion sets up that the plaintiff in error has failed to incorporate in the bill of exceptions a brief of so much of the evidence as is material to a clear understanding of the errors complained of.. By the Civil Code, §5528, a duty is imposed on the judge as well as on the plaintiff in error; and hence this ground of the motion calls for a review of the actions of both. Paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of
We think that the plaintiff in error did what he was required to do by paragraphs 1 and 2. We think the trial judge did what he was required to do in paragraph 3. It is true plaintiff in error did not detail in totidem verbis, or set forth in chronological sequence, the statements coming from the mouths of the witnesses as they were introduced on the hearing of the motion. A hrief of the evidence is what is required, and the briefer the better, and certainly the more helpful to courts of review in reaching the merits of a case. In the bill of exceptions certified by the judge it is stated that all recitals in the motion (to open the default) are “accepted as true and undisputed by the plaintiff in error,” and thereinafter he asks to be sent up, as part of the record, the motion the statements of which, he says, are facts. It amounts to saying, all the evidence, material to a clear understanding of the errors of which I complain, is already “briefed” in the motion, and I ask it to be sent up. A fact admitted is not required to be otherwise proved. And a statement of a fact can not be better verified than by the admission of its truth by the opposite party. We think that it will hardly be questioned that the able judge in the court below so understood it, or he would have complied with the duty laid upon him in the Civil Code, §5528, par. 3, and would have “changed it so as to make it contain all the evidence necessary to a clear understanding of the errors complained of.” This court approves the manner iii which this duty was performed by the trial court. Certainly it would have been impertinent for the defendant to have proved more
In the brief of the defendant in error further objection is urged to the certificate of the judge in that it reads, “certain recitals of the evidence,” while section 5532, as is insisted, requires the wording to be either “contains all the evidence” or “specifies all the evidence.” We are not required to consider this objection, because it is not set forth in the motion to dismiss; and we will only say in passing that the bill of exceptions shows, in the first place, that it is not true in fact. The words used, instead of being “certain” recitals of the evidence, are, “contains recitals” of the evidence. And in the second place, while it is true that section 5532 (Acts 1889, p. 114) "prescribes a set form for the judge’s certificate, it is also true that a later enactment (Acts 1893, codified as section 5534) expressly provides that it shall be the duty of the judge, to whom any bill of exceptions is presented, to see that the certificate is in legal form before signing the same; and any failure of any judge to discharge his duty in this respect shall not prejudice the rights of the parties by dismissal or otherwise. And the uniform
The second ground of the motion to dismiss complains that the plaintiff in error, not having incorporated in the bill of exceptions a brief of the evidence, also failed to have such brief approved and sent up as provided in the Civil Code, §5529. This section presents a -right the exercise of which is optional with the plaintiff in error; and section 5531 specifically declares that “The plaintiff in error, -at his election,'‘may incorporate the brief of so much of the evidence as is necessary to a clear understanding of the errors complained of, in the bill of exceptions, rather than have the same sent up in the record.” Having already ruled that section 5528 was effectually complied with, and, even if it had not been so complied with in this case, that it is not good ground for dismissal, there is, in our opinion, no merit in this ground of the motion. It is therefore adjudged that the motion to dismiss be overruled and refused.
The facts in this case are as follows:
J. J. Brawner brought a suit against J. J. & J. E. Maddox, to the November term, 1905, of the city court of Atlanta. The defendants failed to file either answer, demurrer, plea, or other defense at said term as required by law, or afterwards during said term. At the regular appearance call of the court for said term the case was called, and, no defense' having been filed, defendants were in default, and the court so entered upon its docket. The defendants did not, during said first term, when the default was entered against them, make any motion to open the default. At the next term (January, 1906) the defendants presented to the court a written motion or petition praying the court to open the default and to allow them to plead. The motion set up, as reasons why the default should be opened, that J. E. Maddox, one of the members of the firm, had charge of this particular kind of business; that when he Avas served, the copies were laid upon his desk and he fully intended to file proper pleadings by way of defense; that at that time J. E. Maddox was sick, barely able to be at his office or attend to business, and he forgot the papers lying on his desk; that important matters of business called him to New York, and during his absence the papers became misplaced and there was nothing to. remind him of them on.his return; that defendant’s attorney was also sick at that time, for which reason defendants failed to file