6 S.E.2d 130 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Where proceedings are instituted by the State Highway Board of Georgia against a landowner to condemn property under the Code, § 36-301 et seq., and an appeal is taken from the award of the assessors to the superior court, the board shall not "be allowed to withdraw an appeal after it shall be entered, but by the consent of the adverse party." Code, § 6-503.
Code, § 6-503, provides: "No person shall be allowed to withdraw an appeal after it shall be entered, but by the consent of the adverse party." The plaintiff in error contends that the appellate procedure in chapter 6 of the Code (of which the above-quoted section is a part) is not applicable to appeals from condemnation proceedings and therefore the above section is not applicable to the present case. With this we can not agree.
Code, § 3-510, declares in part that "The plaintiff in any action, in any court, may dismiss his action either in vacation or term time, if he shall not thereby prejudice any right of the defendant, and if done in term time, the clerk of court or justice of the peace shall enter such dismissal on the docket." In passing, it might be pertinent to note that by authority of this Code section the Supreme Court, in Georgia Railway andPower Company v. Mooney,
The mode of procedure in condemnation proceedings is provided by statute, parts of which are as follows: "Within 10 days after the award is made, it shall be filed and recorded in the office of the clerk of the superior court of the county where the property is situated or franchise sought to be condemned is exercised." Code, § 36-508. "In case either party, or the representative of either party, is dissatisfied, he or they may, within 10 days from the time the award is filed, enter in writing an appeal from the award to the superior court of the county where the award is filed; and at the term succeeding the filing of the appeal, it shall be the duty of the judge to cause an issue to be made and tried by a jury as to the value of the property taken or the amount of damage done, with the same right to move for a new trial and file a bill of exceptions as in other cases at law." Code, § 36-601. The mode of procedure in appeals from a justice's court to the superior court is likewise statutory and is in part as follows: "Either party being dissatisfied with the judgment of the justice of the peace, and upon all confessions of judgment, provided the amount claimed in said suit is over $50, may, as a matter of right, enter an appeal from said judgment, within four days (exclusive of Sundays) after the rendition of such judgment, under the same rules, regulations, restrictions, and liabilities as are provided on the subject of appeals." Code, § 6-301. "When an appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace has been entered, it shall be the duty of such justice of the peace to transmit the same to the clerk of the superior court of the county in which proceedings may have been had, at least 10 days before the next superior court of said county, to be there tried." Code, § 6-302. "The defendant, in cases appealed from the justice's court to the superior court, shall reduce his defenses to writing before the case proceeds to trial in the superior court, provided he relies upon any plea or defense other than the general issue." Code, § 6-303. It might be well to note *176 in connection with this section last quoted that the Supreme Court, with reference to the procedure in condemnation proceedings, has said that "the defendant in such proceedings may file an appropriate legal defense thereto." Central of GeorgiaPower Company v. Cornwell, supra.
An appeal from an inferior to a superior court for another trial as a de novo investigation was unknown to the common law. Such an appeal as the one here is of statutory origin and the mode of procedure is prescribed by statute. The Supreme Court, in comparing the appeals from a court of ordinary (a court of record) with one from a justice's court (which is not a court of record) to the superior court, said: "It will be seen from a comparison of these Code sections, which are in pari materia, that substantially the same procedure is provided in all cases
where an appeal is allowed to the superior court." (Italics ours.) Robinson v. McAlpin,
It is also to be noticed that "an appeal shall suspend but not vacate the judgment" (Code, § 6-502), and apparently following this Code section, the Supreme Court held that the condemnor "could have entered an appeal [from the award of the assessors in a condemnation proceeding] under the provisions of the statute and could then have had a de novo investigation [in the superior *177
court] as to the value of the property, the damages to be paid, etc.; and the award of the assessors would have been suspended until the final disposition of the cause." Central of GeorgiaRailway Co. v. Thomas,
Therefore, it follows by analogous reasoning with the cases ofCentral of Georgia Power Co. v. Cornwell, supra, and Centralof Georgia Railway Co. v. Thomas, supra, and by comparing the aforementioned Code sections, which are in pari materia, that substantially the same procedure is provided in cases of appeal from an award of assessors in a condemnation proceeding to the superior court as is provided in cases of appeal from a justice's court to the superior court, and we are of the opinion that Code, § 6-503, which prohibits dismissals of appeals but by the consent of the opposite party, applies to the instant case. The judge of the superior court did not err in refusing to allow the State Highway Board to dismiss its appeal.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Guerry, J.,concur.