At the April term, 1915,- of the superior court of Mitchell county T. TJ. Cox was' convicted of voluntary manslaughter, the honorable W. E. Thomas, judge of the superior courts of the Southern circuit, presiding on account of the disqualification of Judge E. E. Cox of the superior court of that county. A motion for a new trial was overruled by Judge Thomas, and his judgment was thereafter affirmed ty this court (17 Ga. App. 727, 88 S. E. 214), and the remittitur made the judgment of the lower court. During the April term of Mitchell superior court counsel for T. U. Cox requested Judge Cox, who was then presiding, to allow the honorable E. D. Bush, judge of the city court of Camilla in Mitchell county, to take the bench and preside as a judge of the superior court for the purpose of passing
To the judgment dismissing the extraordinary motion the defendant excepts, counsel for the movant insisting that Judge Bush, “having assumed jurisdiction of said motion, had full power and authority to hear and determine the same,” and that Judge Thomas erred in refusing to hold that he was himself disqualified to act upon the motion, and erred in disposing of it on May 27, 1916, and in not continuing it until the October term, 1916, of Mitchell superior court, in accordance with the order granted by Judge Bush, after the date May 27 had been fixed by Judge Thomas.
1. The authority of the judge of a city court to preside in cases in the superior courts of'this State is derived from the following provision of the constitution: “In any county within which there is, or hereafter may be, a city court, the judge of said court and of the superior court may preside in the courts of each other in eases where the judge of either court is disqualified to préside.” Article 6, section 5, paragraph 1, of the constitution of Georgia (Civil Code, § 6519). At first blush it might appear that the construction of this part of the constitution is necessarily involved in the decision of this case. The amendment to the constitution adopted in 1916 provides that the Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction “in all cases that involve the construction of the constitution of the State of Georgia or of the United States, or of treaties between the United States and foreign governments; in all cases in which the constitutionality of any law of the State of Georgia or of the United States is drawn in question,” etc. It is apparent that if
To hold that the Court of Appeals must lose jurisdiction over all cases where any right or privilege asserted or denied depended for its allowance or refusal upon the construction of plain and unambiguous language in the constitution, though no question as to the construction of such constitutional provision .was raised, would be practically to enable any litigant (not relying upon a construction of the constitution to support his contentions)' to select the appellate forum in which he might prefer his ease to be determined. ' If the mere insistence that a particular constitutional question was involved would be sufficient to give exclusive jurisdiction over a case to the Supreme Court, it would be easy to inject into any case a constitutional question of that kind, by contending that some perfectly plain provision of the constitution, which perhaps had not been previously construed by the Supreme Court, because susceptible of but one construction, should have some special or strained construction given to it, and thus create a constitutional question in the case. The practical effect of the language elnployed by the amendment of 1916 is apparently to confer automatically upon the Supreme Court exclusive jurisdiction over every case coming to that court or to this court which properly involves the construction of the constitution of this State or of the United States, instead of permitting this court to certify the constitutional questions involved, while retaining the case itself for decision. However, it is not for the Court of Appeals to construe an amendment to the constitution any more than to construe the original constitution itself, and hence what is said on this particular point is merely remarked in passing. The able discussion by Judge Powell of the question when a construction of the constitution is involved, which may be found in tñe case of Fews v. State, 1 Ga. App. 122 (58 S. E. 64), is of interest in this connection, and the following language is especially apropos to the point now under consideration: “A case which involves merely the applicability of a concededly unambiguous clause of the constitution to a given state of facts raises no question of construction. Likewise, where a- clause in the constitution has been construed by the Supreme Court as having a certain meaning and
Paragraph 1 of section 5 of article 6 of the constitution of Georgia (Civil Code, § 6519) reads as follows: “In any county within which there is, or hereafter may be, a city court, the judge of said court and of the superior court may preside in the courts of each other in cases where the judge of either court is disqualified to preside.” There being no statutory provision authorizing the judge of a city court to preside as a judge of a superior court, the paragraph of the constitution quoted above furnishes the only warrant authorizing him so to act, and the authority therein con-. ferred may not be extended by implication. It declares that the judge of a city'court may “preside” for a judge of the superior court “in cases” where the judge of the latter court is disqualified to preside. This language is seemingly too plain and unambiguous to require any interpretation or construction, and distinctly authorizes a judge of a city court to preside in cases in the superior • court, without' suggesting in the remotest manner any grant of authority to such a judge to originate in his judicial capacity, acting as a judge of the superior court, where the regular judge of that court is disqualified, a proceeding of any kind in the latter court. Though, measured by the rule laid down in the Fews case, supra, it seems evident that the language employed in this paragraph of the constitution is too plain to involve or require interpretation, and, therefore, that no constitutional question is “involved,” even if the question were distinctly and clearly made in the record as to the proper construction of this section, it is not necessary to declare what its plain meaning is, for the Supreme Court has already construed this section of the constitution in a case.which in principle decides the precise point in this case. So that, under the ruling in the Fews case, supra, that “if the particular question of construction sought to be raised has been passed upon directly by the Supreme' Court, such question will not be certified to the Supreme Court for repetition of its former decision,” it can not be said that a present construction of the constitution is involved. In' Edmondson v. State, 123 Ga. 194 (51 S. E. 301), the Supreme Court held: “Neither under the act of 1885 (Acts of 1884-5, p. 475, § 30), nor under the constitutional .
2. Without attempting any extended discussion of the rules obtaining where an ordinary motion for a new trial is made, it may be said that as far back as the case of Graddy v. Hightower, 1 Ga. 252, it was held that “When the term of the court at which the judgment was rendered has passed, and no application made and recorded at that term, the record in the cause having been finally made up, the court has no power to grant a new trial, except in some peculiar and extraordinary cases.” In Cox v. Hill-
From Harris v. Roan, supra, as well as from many other cases, it is apparent that the trial judge should exercise his discretion in granting or refusing a rule nisi on an extraordinary motion for a new trial. As was said by Powell, J., in Seaboard Air-Line Ry. v. Reid, 6 Ga. App. 18, 20 (63 S. E. 1130), “Where the party has had one review by the higher court and a decision has been made against him, and he seeks to obtain from the judge of the court below a second bill of exceptions, the reviewing court will make a preliminary examination into the error complained of, and will not grant, the mandamus nisi unless the contentions of the applicant present such a show of merit as to raise a fairly debatable question as to their validity.”. From the statement of facts in the case
We think it obvious that the original case which had been tried and determined and brought to this court, and in which the judg
Furthermore, if the attempted extraordinary motion in this case was merely an additional proceeding in the original ease, and was therefore a “pending” case when the judge of the city court was requested by counsel for plaintiff in error to assume jurisdiction of the same (as argued by counsel for movant), that judge was not requested to preside by the disqualified judge of the superior court, and there is no existing provision of law which would allow one of the parties in a pending case to select the judge to pass thereon.
Judgment affirmed.