9 S.E.2d 243 | Ga. | 1940
1. If the clerk of the trial court had transmitted the bill of exceptions and the record in this case within the time required by law, the case would have reached this court in ample time to be heard during the September term, 1939, to which it was returnable; but as it did not reach the Supreme Court until after the docket for that term had been *362 closed, this court, according to former unanimous decisions, would not have jurisdiction to entertain the writ of error, under the law as it existed before the constitutional amendment of 1936 in reference to delay on the part of the clerk.
2. By that amendment it was provided that "if the transmittal of the record be unavoidably delayed by reason of the illness or death of the clerk of the trial court, or of some member of his family, so that the case has not been docketed in the Supreme Court before the close of the docket of the term to which it is by law returnable (the facts causing such unavoidable delay to be certified by the clerk in commission and by a judge of the trial court), the case shall be heard at the next term, which shall be regarded as its first term." The facts certified by the clerk as reasons for the delay in the present case, being foreign to any cause mentioned in the amendment, the provisions of the amendment are inapplicable, and the motion to dismiss the writ of error must be sustained.
3. The request of counsel for the plaintiff in error to review and overrule the decision in Palmer v. State,
2. Under the foregoing decisions, no reason which the clerk might give for his delay would cure the defect, before the constitutional amendment relative to that subject as ratified on November 3, 1936. By that amendment it was provided that "if the transmittal of the record be unavoidably delayed by reason of the illness or death of the clerk of the trial court, or of some member of his family, so that the case has not been docketed in the Supreme Court before the close of the docket of the term to which it is by law returnable (the facts causing such unavoidable delay to be certified by the clerk in commission and by a judge of the trial court), the case shall be heard at the next term, which shall be regarded as its first term." Ga. L. 1935, p. 1238; Ga. Code Ann. Pocket Part, § 2-3006. The certificate of the clerk in the present case contained no reference to any cause mentioned in such amendment, but gave entirely different reasons for his delay. Accordingly, the amendment is inapplicable, and the writ of error must be dismissed, under the authorities cited. Any one who may care to make further examination of the law upon this subject is respectfully referred to the opinions in the foregoing cases, plus the following: Goodman v. Morris,
The decisions referred to in the first division were each concurred in by all the Justices, as were those listed in the second division, except the Earnhart case, in which it appears that one of the Justices was absent. Such unanimous decisions are binding as authority, so long as they are not reviewed and overruled in the manner prescribed by law. Code, § 6-1611. There is a request to review and overrule only the later decision inPalmer v. State,
Writ of error dismissed. All the Justices concur.