The Court of Appeals propounds the following question: While Judge Price Edwards, one of the judges of the superior courts of Georgia, was presiding over the superior court
We answer that Judge Edwards had jurisdiction of the motion presented at the time and place and under the circumstances stated in the question. According to the facts stated, the judge acted in term time. See Chattanooga &c. R. Co. v. Owen, 90 Ga. 265, 267 (15 S. E. 853). Pendergrass v. Duke, 140 Ga. 550 (79 S. E. 129), and Cross v. State, 150 Ga. 786 (105 S. E. 371), are not in point, as they dealt with the powers of superior-court judges, who had been presiding in a circuit other than their own, to assume jurisdiction of motions after their services in such circuits had ceased and the duties of the office were being performed by another or the regularly elected judge.
