117 Ga. 476 | Ga. | 1903
The constitution declares: “The Supreme Court shall dispose of every case at the first or second term after such writ of error is brought; and in case the plaintiff in error shall not be prepared at the first term to prosecute the case — unless prevented by providential cause, — it shall be stricken from the docket, and the judgment below shall stand affirmed.” Civil Code, § 5837. The 24th Rule of the Supreme Court provides: “ On the call of a case, if the plaintiff in error be unrepresented, counsel for defendant in error may move to open the record and insist on an affirmance of the judgment and an award of ten per cent, damages for delay; or the case will be dismissed for want of prosecution, and will not be reinstated except for providential cause.” Civil Code, § 5621. When this case was called in its order, neither the plaintiff in error nor his counsel appeared in person to prosecute the same, and no briefs in his behalf were at that time of file in the clerk’s office. In compliance with the constitutional provision and the rule of court passed in pursuance thereof, an entry was made upon the docket to the effect that the case was dismissed for want of prosecution, and it was stricken from the docket. At a later time in the same day, during the same session of the court, a little more than an hour after the case was called, the clerk called attention to the fact that the postman had, after the case had been stricken from the docket, delivered to him a package which contained briefs of counsel in behalf of the plaintiff in error. This package was received before the clerk had entered upon the minutes of the court the judgment of dismissal; and it appeared by a stamped entry on the package delivered to the clerk that it had been received by the postmaster and. was actually in the Atlanta post-office for some hours before the case was called in its order. The court declined, upon this statement of facts, to expunge from the docket the entry of dismissal and reinstate the case. In Shackelford v. Hays, 3 Ga. 415, it was held that miscarriage of the mails in the transmission of papers to the clerk of this court is no ground for continuing a case, unless shown to be from providential cause. In Osborn v. Hale, 70 Ga. 731, the case was called and dismissed for want of prosecution. Later in the. same day briefs of counsel for plaintiff in error reached the clerk by mail. On the next day, and presumably after the judgment of dismissal had been entered upon the minutes, a motion to reinstate the case was made, upon the
While it is well settled that counsel takes the risks of the mails, and that the ordinary delays of the mails are not in any sense providential cause, there is no ruling by this court in a case where the facts were identical with those in the one now before us. The briefs in this case were not only deposited in the mail in time to have reached the clerk before the case was called, but they did actually reach the Atlanta post-office before that time, and were then either in the post-office or in the hands of a postman, who was on his rounds making his way to the capitol to deliver mail, and were actually delivered to the clerk before the adjournment of the court for the day and before the judgment of dismissal had been entered upon the minutes. The rule of court requires that a case shall be dismissed, if at the time it is called “ the plaintiff in error be unrepresented.” The plaintiff in error would be represented, within the meaning of this rule, when he appeared in person or by counsel on the call of the case, or if at that time briefs in his behalf were of file in the clerk’s office. Appearance in any one of