This is a certiorari to the Court of Appeals. 1
*165 The question is whether the dismissal of certiorari by a superior court because a magistrate fails to answer timely and before a motion to dismiss bars a second certiorari filed within six months under Code Ann. § 3-808.
The essential facts here are as follows: On March 1, 1977, the Atlanta Municipal Court declared Schaffer’s establishment, the "Love Machine,” a nuisance per se and ordered it closed instanter. On March 9,1977, a certiorari from this judgment was filed in the Fulton Superior Court. The certiorari was dismissed on motion of the City of Atlanta because the judge of the Atlanta Municipal Court had not answered the certiorari. That decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. 2 This court denied certiorari from that decision on June 29,1978. Thereafter, on August 22,1978, a second certiorari from the judgment of the Atlanta Municipal Court was filed with the Fulton Superior Court. This second certiorari was dismissed by the Fulton Superior Court which held that the dismissal of the first certiorari for the reason assigned barred a second certiorari. The Court of Appeals reversed that judgment, holding that the second certiorari was not barred because the first certiorari was not dismissed on the merits and therefore the second certiorari, having been filed within six months of the final decision, was valid under Code Ann. § 3-808. We granted certiorari to review the Court of Appeals decision.
We reverse. It is well established that the plaintiff in certiorari to a superior court has the duty of ascertaining whether the magistrate has filed his answer and, if not, to move the superior court to order it filed. As stated in
Sutton v. State,
Also, in
J. M. High Co. v. Ga. R. & Power Co.,
Although it may be said that the dismissal of a certiorari because the magistrate failed to file his answer is not upon the merits, nevertheless it is an involuntary dismissal. Prior to the Civil Practice Act, voluntary and
*167
involuntary dismissals not upon the merits were treated alike under Code Ann. § 3-808.
Clark v. Newsome,
Judgment reversed.
