12 Ga. App. 68 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1912
Upon the call of this case in the Court of Appeals, a motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, upon the ground that at the time the presiding judge certified the bill of exceptions, it had not been signed either by the plaintiff in error or his counsel. In support of this motion the defendant in error tendered an affidavit of L. P. Skeen, Esq., one of his' counsel, who deposed that after the judge had certified the bill of exceptions, the deponent examined the same in the clerk’s office, and ascertained from an inspection thereof that it had not been signed either by the plaintiff in .error or his counsel. There was also an affidavit of the presiding judge, Hon. B. Eve, to the effect that when he certified the bill of exceptions, it had not been signed by the plaintiff in error or his counsel, but that the deponent directed the clerk to call the attention of counsel for the plaintiff in error to the fact that he had not signed the bill of exceptions.
The motion to dismiss the writ of error must be sustained, upon the authority of Sumner v. Sumner, 116 Ga. 798 (43 S. E. 57), where it was held, that “a paper purporting to be a bill of exceptions, but not signed by the plaintiff in error or his counsel when certified by the trial judge, is not a legal bill of exceptions, and can not, over objection, be amended in the Supreme Court by attaching counsel’s name thereto. Upon motion it will be dismissed.” See, also, to the same effect, O’Connell v. Friedman, 117 Ga. 948 (43 S. E. 1001). The bill of exceptions appears on its face to have been signed by counsel for the plaintiff in error, and the clerk of the trial court attached to the bill of exceptions a certificate that “the foregoing is the true original bill of exceptions filed in this office in the case therein referred to.” It is contended by counsel for the defendant in error that, as the Court of Appeals has no original jurisdiction, and therefore no power to determine
The difficulty with this contention is that the decisions of the Supreme Court are binding as precedents upon this court, and this is true whether the decisions relate to a matter of practice or to a substantive rule of law. ■ In the Sumner case, above cited, the bill of exceptions appeared on its face to have been signed by counsel for the plaintiff in error. The clerk certified that “the foregoing is the true original bill of exceptions filed in this office [in the case] of S. J. Sumner v. J. L. Sumner, therein referred to." A motion to dismiss the writ of error was made, on the ground that at the time the bill of exceptions was certified, it had not been signed by plaintiff in error or his counsel. The only evidence offered in support of this motion in the Supreme Court was the affidavits of Samuel S. Bennet, Esq., one of the counsel for the defendant in error, and Hon. W. N. Spence, the judge who certified the bill of exceptions. These affidavits were not disputed by the plaintiff in error or his counsel, and the Supreme Court accepted and acted upon the statements therein contained. The situation here is exactly the same. The motion to dismiss was served upon counsel for the defendant in error. By his silence and his failure to contest the statements of fact contained in the affidavits of Mr. Skeen and Judge Eve, he must be held to have admitted the truth of these statements. So that, whether the decision in the Sumner case be right or wrong, it is absolutely binding upon this court, and must be followed.
It is suggested by counsel for the defendant in error that the decision in the Sumner case was rendered by only five Justices. A decision rendered by a° majority of the Justices of the Supreme Court is a decision of that court, and is as much binding upon the Court of Appeals as if it had been rendered by a full bench. As we understand the rule that prevails in the Supreme Court, a decision that is rendered by five Justices may be overruled in that court by four Justices, or perhaps by three Justices where only
Moreover, there is no issue of fact raised upon the motion to dismiss for this court to determine. We perhaps would not hear evidence that the bill of exceptions had not been signed at .all, because it purports to have been signed by the counsel for the plaintiff in error; but the signature is not dated, and there is nothing' upon the face of the record to show affirmatively that the bill of exceptions was signed before it was certified by the judge. In the absence of proof to the contrary, this court would presume that the bill of exceptions had been signed in due course,—that is, before it was tendered to the judge for certification. The certificate of the clerk is not necessarily inconsistent with the affidavits of Mr. Skeen and Judge Eve. It contains no recital which necessarily implies that the bill of exceptions was signed before it was certified by the judge. Indeed, it may have been signed before it was filed in the clerk’s office, -and yet be absolutely void because not signed before it was certified by the judge. All that the clerk’s certificate really means is that the document which he transmits to this court as a bill of. exceptions is the document which appeared of file as such in his office at the time his certificate was made.
Counsel for the defendant in error places reliance upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Georgia, Florida & Alabama Railroad Co. v. Lasseter, 122 Ga. 679 (51 S. E. 15). In that case an affidavit was entered upon the original bill of exceptions that a true and exact copy of the same had been served by. the affiant, upon the defendant in error. A motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, upon the ground that the paper served.on the defendant in error was not a true copy of the original, it not appearing to have been certified by the trial judge, the certificate not being dated, and there being nothing on the copy to indicate that it had ever been presented to the presiding judge. The Supreme Court, treating this motion as in the nature of a traverse ,o|. ;the
The case of Wade v. Watson, 133 Ga. 608 (66 S. E. 922), is also relied on by counsel for defendant in error. In that case it was simply held that a judgment of the Supreme Court which had been obtained by fraud practiced upon the court by means of an entry of acknowledgment of service, placed on the bill of exceptions, without the authority or consent of the defendant in- error or his counsel, could be set aside by the superior court. Following this decision, it may be that, since the bill of exceptions in the present case is an absolute nullity because not signed by the plaintiff in error or his counsel before it was certified by the judge, if this court should render a judgment upon the merits, and the defendant. in error should not discover until after the rendition of such judgment that the bill of exceptions had not been signed in due time, he could, by a petition in equity, have the judgment of the Court of Appeals decreed to be void. But this is not his exclusive remedy. Indeed, having discovered before the case reached
Writ of error dismissed.