1 Ga. App. 731 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
The plaintiff in error filed a petition for certiorari, making assignments of error as to refusal to sustain a demurrer, and as to the admitting in evidence of the receipt of its agent for the freight on certain buggies, and the allowance of an amendment making Oliver & Morrow usees of the Chestnut Mountain Merchandise Company. The petition further alleged that the verdict was erroneous, for lack of evidence. The certiorari was overruled by the judge of the superior court, and exception is taken to his judgment.
"We can not reverse the judgment overruling the certiorari. The judge of the superior court must get the truth of the case from the answer j the certiorari would not lie until the final determination of the case in the justice’s court, and the answer of the justice ■did not show, either that the case had been finally decided by verdict, or, if so, what was the finding of the jury. Ordinarily it must appear that there has been a final judgment, and the answer of the justice must verify the judgment alleged as being the judgment which, was rendered. By the terms of the Civil Code, §4149, where a case is appealed to a jury in a justice’s court, the verdict, instead of the judgment, must be excepted to. This is for the rea.son, as stated by Chief Justice Jackson in Boroughs v. White,
We do this the more willingly because, under the decisions of this court in Barfield v. G. S. & F. R. Co., Askew v. Southern Ry. Co., and Davis v. Kirkland, ante, 203, 79, 5, there is no merit in the other assignment of error. The opinion in Brown v. Bonds, 125 Ga. 841-2, 844, cited by learned counsel for the defendant in error, as authority for his contention that even where certiorari is taken from the result of a trial on appeal in a justice’s court, a final judgment must appear, is not in conflict with w;hat we have ruled above. Nor was the question now before us involved in the case of Brown v. Bonds. For that reason it is not applicable to-this case. The decision in W. & A. R. R. v. Carson, 70 Ga. 389 (3) is controlling. It distinctly and properly construes section 4149 of the Civil Code, and ■ expressly holds that it is the verdict of the jury, and not the judgment thereon, which is to be corrected by certiorari. Judgment affirmed.