136 Ga. 832 | Ga. | 1911
In this case the hill of exceptions was presented to the presiding judge on October 19, 1909, and the certificate thereto was signed December 14, 1910. The certificate recites that the bill of exceptions was presented in time and.was “held for consideration.” Below the certificate is a statement signed by the judge as follows: “Bcc’d October 19th, 1909, and held for examination.” No application was made to ibis court to require the judge to certify the bill of exceptions. Civil Codo (1910), § 0158, provides: “If the judge shall determine that ihc bill of exceptions is not true, or does not contain all the necessary facts, he shall return the same, within ten days, to the party or his attorney, with his objections to the same in writing. If those objections are mot and removed, the judge may then certify, specifying in his certificate the cause of the delay. If the judge sees proper, he may order notice to the opposite party of the fact and time of tendering the exceptions, and may hear evidence as to the truth thereof.” When the bill of exceptions was presented to the judge he kept it for “examination” and “consideration.” It was not returned to counsel for the plaintiff in error, because it was not true, or did not contain “all the necessary facts.” When the bill of exceptions was presented to the judge, within ten days thereafter he should have certified it or returned it to counsel for the plaintiff in error under the provisions of the section above quoted. The failure of the judge, however, to certify the bill of exceptions within ten days from the time it was presented to him would not work a dismissal of the writ of error, unless the failure to certify the bill of exceptions within the ten days “was caused by some act of the plaintiff in error or his counsel.” Under the act of 1896, embodied in the Civil Code (1910). § 6187, it is provided: “No bill of exceptions shall be dismissed
The Civil Code (1910), § 6159, provides: “Íí from any cause the bill of exceptions is not certified by the judge, without fault of the party tendering, such party or his attorney shall apply at the next term of the Supreme Court, and, on petition, obtain from said court a mandamus nisi directed to such judge.” We do not think section 6187, hereinbefore quoted, prohibits a dismissal when the bill of .exceptions is held by the judge, with the express or tacit acquiescence of the plaintiff in error, for long period after the expiration of the ton days, without being certified. This section should be construed in connection with other sections of the code. So construed, it was not the legislative intent that a plaintiff in error or his counsel, upon tendering a bill of exceptions, should remain inactive for an indefinite length of timeymd permit the judge to hold the bill of exceptions without any action upon it. If the act of 1896 should be so construed, the judge might overlook the bill of exceptions or lay it aside and let years pass before taking action upon it. In the meantime, the defendant in error would remain in a state of uncertainty, and his rights and rights of property might have a cloud cast upon them by reason of the tendering and retention of an inchoate bill of exceptions. While the act of 1896 prohibited the dismissal of a bill of exceptions because thi judge after receiving it in due time did not certify it within the time prescribed by law, yet it did not entirely relieve the plaintifl in error or his counsel from any diligence in regard to the matter,
Writ of error dismissed.