105 Ga. 636 | Ga. | 1898
The grand jury of Muscogee county returned as true three bills of indictment against Anna Hunley, charging her in each bill with the offense of larceny from the house. Two of these bills were found at the regular November term, 1897, and the othér at the February adjourned term, 1898, and were pending in the superior court of Muscogee county at the May term, 1898. It appears from the record, that on the 3d day of June, 1898, during said May term, the superior court, Judge Butt presiding, passed orders apparently regular, transferring each of said cases to the city court of Columbus for trial, and by his order, entered in each of the cases, directed the sheriff to notify all witnesses and the attorneys for the defendant that said cases'had been transferred and were pending in the city court of Columbus. During said May term and on the 7th day of June of said term, the defendant presented her demand for trial in each of said cases to the superior court. These demands were in legal and proper form, and by special permission of the court were allowed and placed upon the minutes of the superior court. Neither of the cases was tried in the superior court at the May term; and the first term of the city court of Columbus, after the demands made in the superior court, was the July term, 1898. At the July term, 1898, of the city court, neither of the cases was tried, and the plaintiff in error, by her counsel, moved the court to discharge the defendant and to pass an order for such discharge, as an absolute acquittal of the offenses with which she stood charged in the said bills of indictment. The judge of the city court of Columbus refused the orders asked for, and the cases were continued. To this ruling refusing said orders the plaintiff in error excepted, and assigns error on such refusal in each of the cases. The three cases involve the same point of law, and by direction were argued together here, and are each herein adjudicated.
Counsel' for plaintiff in error contends, that, in refusing to .discharge the prisoner under the demands for trial, the court
It appears that on the 7th day of June, plaintiff in error submitted to the judge of the superior court her demands for trial in the cases which had theretofore been transferred, and it is equally true that the superior court granted the orders and had them placed upon the minutes of the superior court. To give •effect to both sections of the Penal Code to which we have adverted, that is, that cases charging misdemeanors may be transferred from the superior court to the city court, and the provision securing to a defendant the right of a demand for trial, it must be held that the terms of the court to which the case has been transferred are to be regarded as the terms of the court covered by the statute, and that a demand for trial, in order to be effective, must be made to the court in which the case is pending at .the time of the-demand. On the 7th of June, when the demands for trial were made in the. superior court, the eases were pending for trial in the city court of Columbus, and to render the
Affirmed.