2 Ga. App. 428 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The defendant in error brought a suit against the Macon Fair Association, and had summons of garnishment served upon the plaintiff in error, the Central of Georgia Railway Company. The garnishee answered that it was not indebted, and the plaintiff (present defendant in error) traversed that answer. On April 1, 1907, the court entered judgment against the garnishee
“To the Central of Georgia Eailway Company: You are herebj' notified to produce upon the trial of. the said case in the city court of Macon, to be used as evidence for the plaintiff, the originals of all vouchers issued by the Central of Georgia Eailway Company to the Macon Fair Association, or to Eugene Anderson, Secretary of said Macon Fair Association, or to Bridges Smith, President of said Macon Fair Association, or to any other officer or agent of said Macon Fair Association, or to" any one else for said Macon Fair Association; also the original checks with which said vouchers were paid; also the copies retained by the Central of Georgia Eailway Company of all letters transmitting said vouchers, or any of them.” This was signed by the plaintiff’s attorneys, and an acknowledgment of service thereon, 'dated March 16. 1907, was signed by Mr. Feagin as attorney for the garnishee.
Counsel for garnishee stated in his place that he had delivered the notice to produce (the copy) to Messrs. Wimberly & Jordan, division counsel, at Macon, Georgia, on March 20, 1907, his first opportunity to do so after receiving it from plaintiff’s counsel, and that the division counsel at once, on March 20, 1907, wrote to the proper authorities at Savannah, requesting that the papers
Two questions are raised as presented by the record, to wit: should the traverse have been dismissed; and did the court err or abuse its discretion in entering judgment by default, because of the failure of the garnishee to produce the voucher? A notice to produce' is a harsh procedure, and the law relative thereto must, for that .reason, be strictly construed and followed closely. We think the court erred in granting the peremptory order requiring the garnishee to have the papers in court by nine o’clock a. m. of1 April 1st, 1907, and also in the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the garnishee. The learned counsel for defendant in error would be right in his conclusion of law if- his premises were correct. The court should have had evidence before it on which to base the proceedings taken, and 'the party giving the notice (defendant in error) should have made the showing required by tlie^ Civil Code, § 5250. Counsel for defendant in error relies upon the recital of the court in the bill of exceptions, that “counsel fcr the party giving notice stated in his place that the papers called for were material to the case, and that they were in the custody of the garnishee in.the city of Savannah, Georgia, and were not in the custodjr or control or possession of the applicant; and that-as a matter of fact the applicant could get along if one little voucher were produced under notice, and that the same was in garnishee’s possession in Savannah, Georgia.” This evidence was competent and sufficient in some respects, and yet it was fatally defective in a most important particular. It was shown that the voucher was in Savannah, by the admission of the counsel for the garnishee; and he asked for time in which to produce it; and although it was not necessary, under the ruling in Morrison v. Hilburn, 126 Ga. 114, 54 S. E. 938, the judgment was introduced in evidence, but there was no evidence as to the contents of the paper sought to be produced, nor that they were material to» the issue; and for this reason the courti should not have granted the peremptory order in the first place, and -rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the garnishee thereafter. It is true that, according to the certificate of the presiding judge, counsel .stated that the papers called for were material, but this was a mere
Judgment reversed.