17 S.E.2d 919 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
The jurisdiction of a court to act in a case which has been set by a term order to be heard in vacation is confined to the questions the jurisdiction as to which is provided for in the order setting the case to be heard in vacation. Consequently, where the judge issues a rule nisi on a motion for new trial, calling on the opposing party to show cause at a time in vacation why a new trial should not be granted, the court is without jurisdiction at the time in vacation at which the hearing is set to vacate judgments which were rendered in term time on the pleadings, to sustain other motions which do not pertain to the motion for new trial, to set aside the verdict and the judgment rendered, and to enter a final judgment in the case.
The motion for new trial was in the usual form based on the general grounds. The rule nisi ordered cause shown why the motion should not be granted. Neither the rule nisi nor the order providing for the time of hearing, filing of the brief of evidence, etc., made any provision for the retaining of jurisdiction by the court as to any question except the one whether the motion for new trial should or should not be granted. The question is whether the court, in vacation, at the time set for the hearing of the motion for new trial, had jurisdiction to vacate the rulings on the pleadings and enter the order shown in the statement of facts. Under the answers of the Supreme Court to certified questions by this court in this case (Scarbrough v.Bell,
Judgment reversed. Stephens, P. J., and Sutton, J., concur.