153 Ga. 606 | Ga. | 1922
The question concedes in effect that Federal control under the provisions of the act of Congress was proper matter for judicial cognizance; and the sole inquiry is whether it was not necessary for the railroad company to make the point in the justice’s court; and having failed to do so, was it not too late to insist upon it for the first time on certiorari?
In the Civil Code (1910), § 5734, it is declared: “The existence and territorial extent of States, their forms of government, and symbols of nationality, the laws of nations, and general customs of merchants, the admiralty and maritime courts of the world and their seals, the political constitution and history of our own government, as well as the local divisions of our own State, the seals of the several departments of the government of the United States, and of the several States of the Union, and all similar matters of public knowledge are judicially recognized without the introduction of proof.” In § 5818 it is declared: “The public laws of the United States, and of the several States thereof, as published by authority, shall be judicially recognized without proof.” There is a similar provision that laws and resolutions of the General Assembly, as published by authority, shall be held, deemed, and considered public laws, and recognized judicia’ly without proof. Civil Code (1910), §,5797. In the case of Combs v. State, 81 Ga. 780 (8 S. E. 318), it was held: “ In a prosecution under one of the local-option laws passed by the legislature, it is not necessary for the State either to allege in the indictment, or to prove before the jury, that such laws are operative in the counties which have adopted them by a vote of the people. They are public local laws, published by authority, and may be judicially recognized without proof. Where the local-option act in question provided for consolidation and return of votes to the clerk of the superior court; that the clerk should announce the result by publication; and that the act should take effect on the day of publi
In Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Holliday, 73 Fla. 269 (17) (74 So. 479), it was held: “Even though both the plaintiff and the defendant ignore a statute and proceed as though such statute did not exist or had no applicability, and fail to bring the same to the attention of the trial judge, by whom it was also evidently
In a note to the case of Line v. Line, 34 Ann. Cas. 1914D, 192, 196, it is said: “The weight of authority is in accord with the holding of the reported case, to the effect that if the attention of the trial court is not called to a fact within its judicial knowledge and such fact is not judicially noticed, judicial notice thereof will not be taken on appeal. . . In several cases, however, appellate courts have, without attempting to lay down any rule on the subject, taken judicial notice of facts which had been ignored by the trial court. New York Indians v. United States, 170 U. S. 1, 18 S. Ct. 531, 42 U. S. (L. ed.) 927; Bosworth v. Union R. Co., 26 R. I. 309, 3 Ann. Cas. 1080, 58 Atl. 982. See also Rodgers v. Cady, 104 Cal. 288, 38 Pac. 81; Harvey v. Territory, 11 Okla. 156, 65 Pac. 837.”
A different kind of case was involved in New York Indians v. United States, supra. That case involved a proper construction of certain treaties between the United States Government and certain Indian nations, in the course of which it was deemed necessary to allude to certain documents which had not been introduced in the trial court. It was said by Brown, J. (170 U. S. 32): “Our attention has also been called to certain documents emanating from the executive and legislative departments of the Government, some of which tend to strengthen the idea that these departments never intended to treat the action of the Indians as a forfeiture of their grant, and acquiesced in the justice of the claims the Indians now make, and have already made under the treaty of Buffalo Creek. It is insisted by the Attorney-General, that, as these documents are not referred to in' the findings of fact by the court below, this court cannot consider them; but as they are documents of which we may take judicial notice, we think the fact that they are not incorporated in the findings of the court will not preclude us from examining them, with a view of inquiring whether they have the bearing claimed. Jones v. United States, 137 U. S. 202, 214 [11 Sup. Ct. 80, 34 L. ed. 691], While it is ordinarily true that this court takes notice Of only such facts as
It follows that the question propounded by the Court of Appeals, should be answered in the negative.