11 Ga. App. 290 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Luke brought an action in the city court of Thomas-
1. In the original act creating the city court of Thomasville
It has been several times held that where the act creating a city court provides that all defenses shall be filed before or by the first day of the term, the judge has no authority to permit a defense to be filed at a later date. Dodson Printers’ Supply Co. v. Harris, supra; Pitts v. Wheeler, 6 Ga. App. 720 (65 S. E. 689); Hunter v. Hinman, 7 Ga. App. 387 (66 S. E. 1039). In Bass v. Doughty, 5 Ga. App. 458 (63 S. E. 516), it was held that under the peculiar language creating the city court of Bainbridge, a defense might, in the discretion of the trial judge, be filed after the first day of the term. The decision rendered in that case really
2. It does not follow, however, that the judge of the city court of Thomasville is, under the above-cited provision of the act creating the court, wholly without power or authority in any ease to vacate a judgment at the term at which the same was granted. The general rule is that during the term all judgments and orders are in the breast of the court and subject to be modified or vacated for good cause shown. Patterson Co. v. Wilkes, 1 Ga. App. 430 (57 S. E. 1047); Cole v. Illinois Sewing Machine Co., 7 Ga. App. 338 (66 S. E. 979). While the provisions of the act creating the city court of Thomasville imperatively require the trial judge to permit a plaintiff to make proof and take judgment where no defense has been filed up to the time the appearance docket is called, there is nothing in the act which abrogates the general rule, above stated, that during the term the court has plenary power over its judgments. But while this is true, whenever a motion is made to vacate a judgment, even during the term at which the same was rendered, the movant must allege and prove some reason good in law why he had failed to make his defense at the time required
The excuse offered by the plaintiff in error in the present case, for its failure to appear and plead at the proper time, is wholly insufficient. The neglect of movant’s counsel was in law the movant’s neglect. There is no pretense that the counsel had any excuse for failing to file the defenses. On the contrary, the movant does not undertake to explain the negligence of his counsel, but says expressly that he is unable to state why the defense was not filed before the call of the appearance docket, as required by the act. It is also inferable, from the facts alleged in the motion, that the attention of the counsel was called to the casé by the president of the plaintiff in error, and that counsel stated that the case would not be called until the latter part of the week. The plaintiff in error knew that the case was in court, and knew that it was returnable to the March term, 1912; it was charged with knowledge that the defense must be filed before the appearance docket was called. It would be trifling with the courts and with orderly judicial procedure to permit a litigant to sit idly by until after judgment against him has been rendered, and then vacate the judgment upon such an excuse as is offered by. the movant in the present ease. It is argued on behalf of the plaintiff in error that inasmuch as the order refusing to vacate the judgment recites that the trial judge was without discretion, the case should be sent back, in order that upon the coming in of the evidence, the judge might, in the exercise of his discretion, determine whether ox not