FULTON COUNTY v. CORPORATION OF THE PRESIDING BISHOP OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS.
49616
Court of Appeals of Georgia
January 17, 1975
Rehearing Denied February 5, 1975
133 Ga. App. 847
CLARK, Judge.
Judgment affirmed with direction in both cases. Quillian and Clark, JJ., concur.
SUBMITTED JANUARY 10, 1975 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 4, 1975.
Charles E. Moore, for appellants.
Nall, Miller & Cadenhead, Lowell S. Fine, for appellees.
CLARK, Judge.
“This is the right place!” Those words were used by Brigham Young on July 24, 1847, to designate the termination of the hegira of his co-religionists when he selected the location which later became Salt Lake City. Since the Mormon Church is the appellee, that definitive phrase is apropos to the instant case. “This is the right place” in which we can definitively determine if the bar of five years inaction on pending law suits applies to all litigation. This includes consideration of land condemnation actions, the subject-matter of the instant appeal.
1. The statute with which we deal was first enacted in 1953 and placed in the Annotated Code as § 3-512 (
We have italicized those words which were added to what had been contained in Section 1 of the previous statute in order to illustrate the intention of the General Assembly. These italicized words clearly show the lawmakers had in mind the accomplishment of two objectives. The first was to make the five-year nonaction bar binding upon all court proceedings and not limited to suits. The second was specifically to include condemnations so as to overrule the Noble case. Our view is fortified upon reading the second and third sections of this 1967 statute.
Because the language used by the General Assembly in its 1967 enactment plainly covers condemnation cases we should not go contrary thereto unless required to do so by controlling legal principles. As appellant argues the 1967 law is a nullity we examine each of the contentions:
(A) One of these contentions is that the Civil Practice Act repealed by implication the 1967 five-year law. Their argument is that the Civil Practice Act accomplished this in that it was a comprehensive restructuring of the entire subject matter of practice.
(B) Appellant relies upon the cases of State Highway Dept. v. Noble, 220 Ga. 410, supra, and State Highway Dept. v. Union Oil Co., 129 Ga. App. 596 (200 SE2d 301). Since the 1967 legislative declaration was obviously aimed at overruling the Noble case, we need not consider it as controlling.
The Union Oil case presents a different problem as it was decided after the 1967 statute. This court there concluded we were bound to follow the Noble case “absent some clear legislative action to the contrary, and we find
March 16, 1966 CPA first approved
February 28, 1967 Act postponing CPA effective date approved
(March 1, 1967) (Original effective date of CPA)
March 30, 1967 Act amending CPA approved
April 14, 1967 Amendment to 1953 Act approved
September 1, 1967 Effective date of CPA, as amended
A review of this chronology makes it clear that the legislature did not intend to repeal the 1953 Act, as amended in 1967, by the enactment of the Civil Practice Act. Indeed, the chronology makes it clear that the legislature never considered the question of whether it desired to repeal the 1953 Act, as amended in 1967, by its enactment of the Civil Practice Act. The 1967 amendment to the five-year dismissal rule was not enacted and approved until after the legislature had completed its consideration of the Civil Practice Act and the 1967 amendments thereto had been approved. As a result, the legislature could not have intended to repeal by implication or otherwise the 1953 Act and its 1967 amendment when it enacted the Civil Practice Act. In contrast, to adopt appellant‘s argument would mean that the 1967 amendment of the 1953 Act was effective from only April 14, 1967 until September 1, 1967. Under appellant‘s interpretation, the legislature, subsequent to the last day it gave any consideration to the Civil Practice Act (a date no later than March 30, 1967), would have engaged in a meaningless and futile exercise when it amended the 1953 Act. There would not be any reason to amend the 1953 Act to apply to condemnation proceedings, yet have the amendment effective for only four and one-half months. Georgia courts have traditionally and uniformly held that it is always presumed that the legislature in enacting a statute was not performing a meaningless or futile act. City of Jesup v. Bennett, 226 Ga. 606 (176 SE2d 81); King v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 117 Ga. App. 192 (160 SE2d 230). The only legally logical construction that gives effect to the true legislative intent is to hold the 1953 Act as amended in 1967 was not repealed by the Civil Practice Act.
(C) Another argument by appellant is that the 1967 law was repealed through the general repealer section contained in Section 136 of the Civil Practice Act when originally enacted. This is the usual general repealer which provides that: “All laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are hereby repealed.”
(D) A further argument made by able advocate for appellant is that the blanket specific repealer section appearing at page 687 of the 1966 Laws in the original enactment of the Civil Practice Act directly terminated the five-year non-action statute. Therein we find that sub-paragraph (c) reads: “Section 3-510 and Section 3-512, which sections relate to dismissal of actions.” We are unable to give any credence to this contention because the Georgia Code of 1933 does not contain a § 3-512. That section number is given the 1953 Act by the Harrison Company in the unofficial Georgia Code Annotated. While we know the Annotated Code is the principal working tool of the bench and bar of our state, numerous decisions have held that an attempt to amend or repeal a law by reference to a Georgia Code Annotated section
2. Present counsel for Fulton County who was not in this litigation when it was instituted in November 1967 argues that the county‘s failure to take any order resulted from a situation which his brief describes as “a chaotic transitional period” occurring in April 1971 because of a change in Fulton County Superior Court procedures. In appellant‘s fourth enumeration it is contended the trial court erred in connection with local court Rules 14 and 15 which are quoted in the record. This enumeration has no merit as local court rules must yield to the provisions of the general law. Pate v. Scott Real Estate Co., 132 Ga. App. 49, 51 (1) (207 SE2d 567). In fact, the quoted local rule 14 expressly states that Fulton County Superior Court rules and orders shall not be such “as to conflict with the general laws of this state.”
3. In the instant case each litigant had filed individual timely appeals in December 1967 from the Special Master‘s award. Excepting for an order dated December 22, 1967, authorizing the clerk of the court to pay the church the condemnation funds from the court treasury, there was no written order of any type taken in either appeal until November 16, 1973. On that latter date the church filed its motion to dismiss Fulton County‘s appeal on the ground that the county had “failed to prosecute the appeal with the requisite diligence by allowing the action to sit dormant” for more than five years. That motion included a paragraph that if granted as to Fulton County then the court should also dismiss the independent appeal of the church under the applicable five-year statute. Fulton County objected as to both dismissals and stated it did not consent to dismissal of the church‘s appeal. This objection was based on the ruling in State Highway Dept. v. Blalock, 98 Ga. App. 630 (106 SE2d 552) that a condemnee cannot dismiss its appeal without the consent of the condemnor, which case dealt with a voluntary withdrawal. Thereupon, the church amended by striking that portion of its motion and suggested the court act ex mero motu.
The court thereafter ruled that both appeals should
4. The dominant leit motif for the five year automatic dismissal for non-action was declared in Swint v. Smith, 219 Ga. 532, 534 (3) (134 SE2d 595). There our Supreme Court said the statute “has at least the dual purpose of preventing court records from becoming cluttered by unresolved and inactive litigation and protecting litigants from dilatory counsel...” The opinion further recognized that “it is in the public interest to remove from court records litigation which has been inactive for a period of five years.” Enforcement of this five-year inaction bar is helpful to judicial administration. Therefore, it should be enforced as to all litigation in conformance with the declared legislative intent shown in their use of the all-inclusive words making it apply to “any suit, action or other proceeding.”
Judgment affirmed. Bell, C. J., Deen, P. J., Quillian, Stolz, Webb and Marshall, JJ., concur. Pannell, P. J., concurs specially. Evans, J., concurs in the judgment.
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 9, 1974 — DECIDED JANUARY 17, 1975 — REHEARING DENIED FEBRUARY 5, 1975 —
John R. Strother, Jr., for appellant.
Kilpatrick, Cody, Rogers, McClatchey & Regenstein, Matthew H. Patton, Robert W. Coleman, for appellee.
PANNELL, Presiding Judge, concurring specially.
I concur in the overruling of State Highway Dept. v. Union Oil Co., 129 Ga. App. 596 (200 SE2d 301). We fell into two errors in that case, (1) in holding that an Act of the Legislature repealing a Section of Harrison Company‘s “Georgia Code Annotated” was a repeal of an Act of the legislature so “codified” by Harrison Company, and (2) in holding a valid Act of the legislature of a given year (1966) could repeal an Act of the legislature of a subsequent year (1967) on the erroneous theory that because the first Act was not “effective” until after the second Act became law, the prior Act could repeal the subsequent one. We failed to properly evaluate the distinction between “the effective” date of the operation of the Act and the date it became a law. It is clear to me now that such a futuristic concept of an older Act repealing a younger one is entirely erroneous. For this reason, I concur in the ruling of the majority that Section 41 (e) of the Civil Practice Act (1966) did not repeal the Act of 1967, even though the Civil Practice Act became effective in operation after the 1967 Act became effective both as a law and in operation, and also, for these reasons, I might add neither an express nor an implied repeal of the Act of 1967 took place, and for this reason alone it being sufficient and controlling.
That there is a clear difference and distinction between the time an Act of the Legislature becomes law and the time it becomes effective in operation may be demonstrated.
Code § 102-105 provides: “Laws, after promulgation, are obligatory upon all inhabitants of this State, and ignorance of the law excuses no one.” This section has been in all of our Codes up to the present time, but what constituted “promulgation” has been the subject of varying conditions in the Codes of 1863 (Sections 3, 4); 1868 (Section 3); 1873 (Section 3) and 1882 (Section 3). These sections did not appear in the Codes of 1895, 1910 and 1933. As to rulings in this area prior to the Codes and during the Codes above recited, see Heard v. Heard, 8 Ga. 380 (4); Boston & Gunby v. Cummins, 16 Ga. 102; Green v. Hall, 36 Ga. 538; Grinad & Benton v. State, 34 Ga. 270 (2). Since the Act of 1876 (
Though not applicable, the automatic but effective operational date was changed by
PANNELL
Presiding Judge, concurring specially.
