210 Ga. 747 | Ga. | 1954
After verdict and judgment and during the term at which they were rendered, the claimants made a motion for a new trial, which was set down for a hearing at Barnesville, Georgia, on January 6, 1954, at chambers and in vacation. On December 29, 1953, Judge Brooke, who had presided at the trial of the case because of the illness of Judge Willingham, wrote counsel for the movants to prepare and mail to him an order resetting the motion for a hearing at Canton, Georgia, on any Saturday in January, 1954, but counsel for the movants did not comply with his direction. On January 6, 1954, no order was passed continuing the motion for hearing on any subsequent date or at any designated place. It does not appear from the record that opposing counsel or the opposite parties had any notice of the letter which Judge Brooke wrote counsel for the movants. At his chambers and in vacation at Canton, Georgia, on January 28, 1954, Judge Brooke entered the following order: “On motion of plaintiffs in the above-stated case, the motion for new trial filed by claimants and set for hearing for January 6th, 1954, is hereby dismissed for want of prosecution. Subsequently, the claimants filed a motion to set aside the order dismissing the motion for new trial and to reinstate it.” The plaintiffs responded in writing to the claimants’ motion and, for reasons therein fully set out, objected to the order prayed for by the claimants. Later at his chambers and in vacation, Judge Brooke granted an order setting aside the order which he had previously granted, dismissing the motion for new trial,
1. The judgment reinstating the motion for new trial must be reversed. Since no written order was granted on January 6, 1954, continuing the motion for new trial to be heard on a future date and at a designated place in vacation, the hearing went, by force of the original order and by operation of law, over to the next regular term of the court. Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Ry. Co. v. Strickland, 114 Ga. 998 (41 S. E, .501). Hence, the court was without jurisdiction on January 28, 1954, to dismiss the motion for a new trial, and the subsequent orders reinstating the motion for new trial and refusing a new trial were also void for want of jurisdiction. Sharp v. Findley, 71 Ga. 654 (8); Davis v. Harden, 143 Ga. 98 (84 S. E. 426); Phoenix Bank v. Shirling, 146 Ga. 163 (91 S. E. 23), and citations; Hinson v. Tanner, 147 Ga. 804 (95 S. E. 687). This being so, the motion for new trial is still pending in the trial court, to be completed and determined under the original order.
See, in this connection, Wells v. Taylor, 184 Ga. 745 (193 S. E. 175). So far as the record discloses, no attempt was made after January 6, 1954, by either of the parties to reinvest the court with jurisdiction to hear and determine the motion for new trial in vacation und,er Code .§§ 24-2618, 24-2619 by making an application for such hearing and giving the opposite parties or their counsel ten days’ notice of the' time and , .. place of hearing.
2., Since the motion for new trial was not continued for a hearing in vaca- . -tion by a written order on January 6, 1954, and since there has been ■,, no compliance with the provisions of Code §§ 24-2618 and 24-2619 by either of the parties, the court was without jurisdiction in vacation to render any further judgment respecting the motion for new trial. This bping true, the judgments complained of both in the main bill of exceptions and in the cross-bill of exceptions are nullities.
Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions and also on the cross-bill 0} exceptions.