232 Ga. 679 | Ga. | 1974
This is an appeal by the defendant in an ejectment action from denial of a new trial motion following a directed verdict for the plaintiff. The issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to allow the defendant’s attorney to present his case when the attorney arrived in the courtroom prior to or coincident with the close of plaintiffs case, and his client, the defendant, was then available subject only to the few moments’ delay that would be required to allow someone to assist her, as she was ill, to mount the stairs to the courtroom.
The record reflected that defendant’s attorney had been out of the country on a delayed eight-day "honeymoon”; that he had returned to his home in the early morning hours of the day of trial; that upon arriving at his office he found the notice informing him that the present suit would be called for the setting of the calendar at 10:00 a.m. on the preceding day; that no one
Subject to constitutional rights of the litigants to notice, plainly the trial court must retain discretionary control of its own calendar. We are hesitant — and rightly so — to upset the court’s rulings on these discretionary matters unless that discretion is clearly abused. Roberts v. Kuhrt, 119 Ga. 704 (46 SE 856); Universal Match Corp. v. Hendricks, 94 Ga. App. 251, 255 (94 SE2d 117); Banister v. Hubbard, 82 Ga. App. 813, 816 (62 SE2d 761); Frost v. Pennington, 6 Ga. App. 298 (65 SE 41). Defendant’s attorney failed in a fundamental duty to be present or to have someone present in his stead when the case was called on the preceding morning to be set for trial, as his office had been given several days’ notice by mail of the calendar call. On the trial day, the court had given a reasonable continuance until the afternoon, and had itself initiated more than one call to the attorney’s office. We think that up to the moment when the directed