143 Ga. 355 | Ga. | 1915
(Alter stating the foregoing facts.)
While no exact formula of words is necessary in adjourning a term of court, the evidence and the note of the presiding judge leave in some doubt the question as to whether he intended by what he said and did to adjourn the term of the court finally,-and whether by the note he meant that that was his usual method of informally adjourning court, or whether there was no final adjournment of court but what happened amounted to a mere cessation of business without .an adjournment. Inasmuch, however, as the regular judge of the circuit, who presided during the week beginning September 21, 1914, refused to grant an injunction against the enforcement of the judgment which would have been entered in vacation if the term of court was finally adjourned on the 25th of September, and the same judge made the note to which we have referred, considering this fact in connection with those above set out, we can not declare that the judge finally adjourned the term of court on the date mentioned; and decline to so rule. In this connection see Pinnebad v. Pinnebad, 129 Ga. 267 (58 S. E. 879). The statement of the attorney, that, “in other words, the said court on said date, in common parlance, adjourned,” was evidently a mere statement of an opinion as to the effect of the facts he had already detailed.
In accordance with what we have said, treating the term of court as not having been finally adjourned when the judgment was entered, it was in time. What has been said in this division of the opinion represents the views of the majority of the Justices off this court. Justices Atkinson and Hill, concur in the ruling that, under the facts set forth in statements of counsel and the certificate of
The verdict was entered on the certified copy of the affidavit and bond, and complaint is made of this fact. The pleadings with respect to the issue against the garnishee consist of the answer of the garnishee and the traverse thereto. The entry of the verdict on the wrong paper will not invalidate it. Roberts v. State, 14 Ga. 18, 19; Sapp v. Parrish, 3 Ga. App. 234 (2), 236 (59 S. E. 821).
"We feel it our duty to call the attention of our brethren of the superior court bench to the great danger and possible wrongs which may arise to litigants and to the public from failing to formally adjourn a term of the superior court and leaving in doubt the question of whether the court is in session or not. A term of court ought to be formally adjourned, and the adjournment ought to be made a matter of record. If it is desired to adjourn a court to another term or take a recess, this should be placed upon the minutes, so that parties and counsel may know when to return to court and when to .anticipate the possibility that their cases may be taken up or disposed of. If the judge simply leaves the court-house and perhaps the county, with no certainty as to whether the court has been adjourned on remains in session, and with no way for counsel, parties, or witnesses to know whether they must still be on the lookout for those things which may happen in term time, or whether they can safely go until some fixed time in the future, and if the judge may at any uncertain time return and transact business suitable only to be done in term time, it will readily be seen that the gravest hardship may happen unintentionally by throwing parties interested in court business off of their guard as to whether court is in session or not in session, and as to whether they are bound to be on the watch for an indefinite time lest the judge may return to the county and their business be disposed of in their absence or when they are unprepared. Moreover such a practice leaves in a state of uncertainty the time within which motions for a new trial and writs of error must be presented.
Judgment affirmed.