116 Ga. 795 | Ga. | 1902
This case originated in a justice’s court. The losing party in that court applied for and obtained a writ of certiorari. In response thereto, the magistrate made answer as follows: “Georgia, Worth County. Office of the Justice of the Peace for the 1428 district G. M. And now comes Isaac Howard, Justice of the Peace in and for the 1428 militia district of said county, and makes this his answer to a certain writ of certiorari heretofore delivered to him, together with a petition therefor, regarding a cause alleged to have been tried before him on the 8th day of March, 1902, on a possessory warrant wherein Fannie Toomerwas plaintiff and Douglas Ford defendant. Replying specifically to the allegations in said petition, respondent says: First, true copies of all the proceedings in said cause are herewith sent up. Witness my official signature, this 12th day of April, 1902. [Signed] Isaac Howard, J. P.” Accompanying this answer were copies of the pleadings in the case, as well as a copy of the judgment rendered by the justice. In the petition for certiorari was set forth what purported to he a brief of the evidence introduced on the hearing before him, and complaint was therein made of certain rulings alleged to have been made against the plaintiff in certiorari. The answer of the magistrate does not, as has been seen, verify the recitals of fact embraced in the petition for certiorari, or adopt as correct the brief of evidence therein set forth. On the call of the case in the superior court, the plaintiff in certiorari invoked a ruling by the judge upon the sufficiency of the answer. He held it to be fatally incomplete. “ Plaintiff in certiorari then moved the court to allow him to take an order requiring said justice to make and file his answer as required by law, on or by the first day of the next term of said superior court, which motion the court overruled.” On motion of counsel for the defendant in certiorari, the court then dismissed “ the certiorari, for the reason that said answer had not been excepted to by written exceptions filed before the case was called for trial.” Error is here assigned upon each of these rulings.
That the answer of the magistrate failed entirely to meet the requirements of the law, is altogether too obvious for discussion, since it neither adopted as correct the brief of evidence contained in the petition for certiorari nor verified its recitals as to what occurred on the hearing before him. The plaintiff in certiorari should, however, have pursued the remedy pointed out in the Civil Code,
Judgment affirmed.