113 Ga. 115 | Ga. | 1901
The record before us discloses that Doster sued out a distress warrant against Hollis, who filed a counter-affidavit, and the issue thus made was tried in a justice’s court. The magistrate, after the introduction of testimony by both the plaintiff and the defendant, decided that under the evidence the latter was not indebted to the former; but, instead of rendering a judgment in favor of the defendant, dismissed the distress warrant. To the judgment of dismissal Doster entered an appeal to a jury in the justice’s court. When the appeal came on to be heard, Hollis moved to dismiss the same, on the ground that, as the judgment rendered by the magistrate was one of dismissal, there was nothing to appeal from, but the plaintiff’s exclusive remedy was certiorari. The motion to dismiss the appeal was overruled, and Hollis sued out a certiorari, alleging that the magistrate erred in refusing to sustain that motion. The superior court upheld the ruling of the magistrate, and Hollis brought the case here.
From the foregoing it will be perceived that this case falls squarely within the decision made by this court in Savannah Railway Co. v. McMillan, 95 Ga. 504, wherein it was held that “A
We think the four cases above referred to are all consistent with each other, and that the decisions rendered in all of them are sound. In the case cited from 91 Ga., the Chief Justice was overcautious in intimating that an appeal would he only “ where the judgment appealed from does not turn the case out of court.” The ruling in the case cited from the 95 Ga. was to the effect that the test was, whether there was in the first instance a trial on the merits. Surely this is the proper test, for the right of appeal from a wrong decision on the facts at issue ought not to be defeated merely because to the error committed in making such a decision was added the further error of dismissing the case as a consequence. Section 4453 of the Civil Code plainly gives the right of appeal “in all civil cases tried and determined by a county judge, or a justice of the peace.” The dismissal of a case, without trying it on its merits, is, of course, a matter for certiorari alone. In the case now for decision there was, as in that reported in 95 Ga., to which we have just referred, a trial on the merits, and a final judgment based on evidence was rendered. This court, in passing upon that case, looked to the substance rather than to the form of the magistrate’s judgment. It is obvious that unnecessary delay would ensue if a judgment of dismissal, based on an erroneous holding that the evidence in behalf of the plaintiff was insufficient to make out his case, had to be set aside upon a writ of certiorari. The new trial ordered would be had by and before the magistrate, not by a jury, and then appeal to a jury would be in order. Undoubtedly the scheme of the statute is to confer the right of appeal as soon as
There is no conflict between the decision in Howell v. Allen, 106 Ga. 16, and what is now ruled. In that case an affidavit of illegality was interposed to the levy of an execution which had been issued upon the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage and was proceeding in the name of Mrs. M. K. Allen, as transferee. This affidavit, which the magistrate designated as the defendant’s plea, was by that officer “dismissed” upon the ground that the defendant introduced no evidence to support it. The opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Fish does not disclose the grounds upon which the affidavit was based, but an examination of the record will show that, in substance, they amounted to this: The mortgage was originally given to Thompson, Allen & King; it had never been transferred and assigned in writing to Mrs. Allen; she had no title to the same, and it was not annexed or attached to the affidavit of foreclosure. Until arrested by the affidavit of illegality, the execution was a writ in
Judgment affirmed.