7 Ga. App. 239 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
At the May term of the city court of Brunswick the case was tried and the motion for new trial was filed and set down for hearing on the third day of July, 1909. The motion was based on the usual general grounds, and attached to it was an order providing that the movant should “have until the hearing, whenever it may be, to prepare and present for approval a brief of the evidence and charge of the court in said case, and the presiding judge may enter his approval thereon at any time, either in term or vacation, and if the hearing of the motion shall be in vacation, and the brief of the evidence and charge of the court have not been filed in the clerk’s office before the date of the hearing, said brief of the evidence and charge of the court may be filed in the clerk’s office at any time within ten days after the motion is heard and determined.” On July 3 counsel for neither party appeared, but the judge, of his own motion, continued the case until July 10 by an order in which it was recited that the case would be heard on that date, unless it was continued upon a good showing. He caused a copy of this order to be served upon counsel for each party. On July 10 counsel for both parties appeared, and counsel for respondent moved to dismiss, on the ground that no brief of evidence had been filed. Counsel for the movant stated that he had forgotten about the matter, but that he had asked the stenographer for' a copy of the testimony taken at the trial, and that he had offered to pay him for it. The stenographer, on the other hand, Stated that the counsel had not requested a copy from him, and that he had been absent from the city on account of illness. The judge dismissed the motion for new trial, and to this exception is taken.
The law expects, theoretically, that motions for new trial should be heard at the same term at which the case in chief is tried; and
Counsel for the plaintiff in error lays some stress upon the fact that the order continuing the motion for new trial gave the movant ten days after the hearing in which to file the brief of the evidence in the office of the clerk of the superior court. This can not help him. By the terms of the order, as well as by the law itself, the brief of the evidence should have been presented to the judge and approved by him before the motion was heard. It is within the power of the court to provide, as was done in this case, for postponement of the time within which the brief shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court to a date subsequent to the hearing; but he can not postpone the time within which the brief of evidence is to be approved beyond the time of the hearing. The only final judgment which the judge can legally grant upon a motion for