16 Ga. App. 273 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
No extended discussion of the various points covered by the foregoing headnotes is considered necessary. Some express reference, however, to the act of 1902 (Acts 1902, p. 105) is deemed advisable, in view of the confusion sometimes arising from a hasty assumption that the act of 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 148), embodied in sections 5192, 5193, and 5194 of the Civil Code, has superseded and repealed all the provisions of the act of 1902, The act of 1902, by its terms, requires that one seeking to review the judgment of a municipal court by certiorari shall, as a condition .precedent to the grant of the writ by the judge of the superior court, “first file with the clerk of said court, or, if no clerk, with the judge of said court,” except where a pauper’s affidavit is provided in lieu thereof, “a bond payable to the municipal corporation under which such court exists, . . conditioned for the personal appearance of the defendant to abide the final order, judgment, or sentence of said court;” or if he be unable from his poverty to give the bond required, he must make affidavit to this effect, and the judge of the superior court shall thereupon, in granting the writ of certiorari, order a supersedeas, though the defendant shall not be set at liberty without giving the bond.
As clearly indicated in Johnson v. Hazlehurst, supra, and in numerous other cases decided by this court, 'the law providing for the filing of the required bond or an affidavit in forma pauperis is still unrepealed and of full force and effect, notwithstanding the act of 1909 (Civil Code, §§ 5192-4), which covers in part the same subject-matter. The act of 1902, as appears from the title thereof, was “an act to require any person seeking a writ of certiorari to correct the judgment of a recorder’s court or other police court of any town or city, by whatever name -known, to give bond, except under certain conditions, to provide when such writ or bond shall operate as a supersedeas, and for other purposes.” The act of 1909 is declared by its title to be “an act to provide for supersedeas of judgments of conviction in county courts, municipal courts, police courts, and all other inferior courts (except constitutional city courts) exercising criminal or quasi-criminal jurisdiction; to provide for the giving of bail, for the filing of pauper affidavits; to declare the effect of the giving of the same, and for other purposes.” There is nothing in the act of 1909 which appears to relate to the primary steps which, under the act of 1902, must be taken by one
The act of 1902 declares that in order to obtain a certiorari, a certain bond or certain affidavit must be made, and that where such a bond or affidavit is made, the judge of the superior court to whom the petition is presented shall “in granting the writ of certiorari, order a supersedeas,” and where the bond is given the defendant may, in addition to obtaining the supersedeas, be set at liberty. The act of 1909, embodied in sections 5192-4 of the Civil Code, makes no attempt to prescribe the conditions precedent or the requirements which must be complied with before a judge of a superior court is authorized to sanction an application for the writ; and therefore it leaves the provisions in the, act of 1902, relating to
It is unnecessary to say more, in affirming the judgment of the court below dismissing the petition for certiorari in this case, than to call attention to the fact that the bond attached to the petition, which was attested and approved by the mayor of the City of Millen, simply binds the defendant and his surety to the mayor and council of that city “in the penal sum of $50, and all future costs which may accrue in said case, for the payment of which they bind themselves,” etc. As was said in Bush v. Boykin, supra, and in Dixon v. Waynesboro, supra, where it nowhere appears in the record of a certiorari ease that the bond or pauper affidavit required by the act of 1902 has been filed, the certiorari should be dismissed; and in Johnson v. Hazlehurst, supra, the court said that the bond attached to a petition for certiorari was fatally defective “in that the petitioner, who had been convicted in the municipal court, was not obliged thereby to appear and abide the final judgment.” As to the form of the bond to be given, the act of 1909 (Civil Code, §§ 5192-4) makes practically the precise requirement that is made by the act of 1902; for section 5192, supra, provides that the bond must be “conditioned that the defendant will personally appear- and abide the final judgment, order, or sentence upon him in said case.” Section 765 of the Penal Code of 1895, taken together with section 1077 of that code (section 1104 of the Penal Code of 1910), makes the same provision as to bond.
The bond given by the defendant in the case now under consideration does not require that the defendant shall personally appear and abide the final judgment, etc., in his case, but declares merely that the principal and his surety acknowledge themselves generally and specially bound in the “penal sum of $50, and all future costs that may accrue in said case.” This clearly is no such bond as is required by the act of 1902, or by section 5192, or by sections 765 and 1077 of the Penal Code of 1895, relating to bonds to be given for certiorari in cases from county courts; and hence the certiorari was properly dismissed.
The proceeding being fatally defective and being properly dis