Under the act creating the city court of Elberton (Ga. Laws 1896, pp. 287 et seq.), it was in the power of the judge of said court to call an adjourned term, and a prisoner convicted and sentenced thereat is not entitled to discharge on habeas corpus by reason of the contention that his trial, having occurred at an adjourned term held more than four weeks from the date of the beginning of the regular term, during which the adjourned term was called, was illegal.
The Code, § 24-3009, expressly empowers judges of the superior courts to hold adjourned terms. The latter part of section 10 of the act creating the city court of Elberton (Georgia Laws 1896, pp. 287 et seq.) contains this language: "And said judge of the city court of Elberton shall have all the powers and authority, throughout his jurisdiction, of judges of the superior courts, except where by law exclusive power and authority is vested in the judges of the superior courts; and all laws relating to and governing judges of the superior courts shall apply to the judge of said city court, so far as the same may be applicable, except as herein provided." Standing alone, the foregoing portion of the act confers a like power on the judge of the city court of Elberton to convene an adjourned term. It is, however, contended that the section 11, immediately following the quoted words, prohibits the judge of the city court from holding court at all, except as therein provided. The section 11 is as follows: "Be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that the regular terms of said city court of Elberton shall be held quarterly, beginning on the second Mondays in February, May, August, and November of each year. The judge of said court shall have power to hold said court in session from day to day for a period not longer than four weeks from the beginning of each term." This section does not deal with adjourned terms of the court at all, but merely prohibits the judge from holding the court in session "from day to day" for a period longer than four weeks from the beginning of each term. In the instant case the judge did not hold the court in session from day to day for a period longer than four weeks from the beginning of any term. He held the court in session only two days at the February term, and then adjourned it until March 16.
The act creating the city court of Baxley (Ga. L. 1897, p. 420), in the latter part of section 10, and in section 11, contains provisions similar to those quoted above from the act establishing the city court of Elberton. Counsel claims that both this court and the Court of Appeals, in cases presently to be referred to, have passed on this question, and that said decisions sustain the position taken by him. The court dealt with the city court of Baxley act in Medders v. Lewis,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
