108 Ga. App. 708 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1963
The general rule is that all bills of exceptions (with a single exception relating to change of venue) must be tendered within 30 days of the decision complained of. Code Ann. § 6-902. The Act of 1957 (Ga. L. 1957, p. 224 et seq.) amended both Code Ann. § 6-902 and § 6-906 in an effort to eliminate dismissal of cases under certain circumstances which worked a hardship on the plaintiff in error. The amendment to Code Ann. § 6-902 provided, as to superior courts, only for instances where no judge authorized by law to certify a bill of exceptions was within the circuit; under these circumstances the bill of exceptions may be tendered to the clerk of court, who shall mark it tendered and retain it until the judge of the superior court has returned to the county in which it is pending, at which time he shall deliver it to that judge for certification. Thus, Code Ann. § 6-902 raises a mandatory commitment by the plain
On the other hand Code Ann. § 6-906 as amended by the same Act provides for instances where, at the time the bill of exceptions is tendered, there is no judge capable of acting at the time the bill of exceptions is tendered (whether such judge be in office or not, and whether he be within the confines of the circuit or not). Under these circumstances the bill of exceptions may be tendered to any superior court judge within the State so long as this is done within the SO day period allowed by law.
An order or certificate signed by a judge not a judge of the circuit where the action is pending and not otherwise authorized by law is void. First Nat. Ins. Co. v. Thain, 107 Ga. App. 100, 104 (129 SE2d 381). In Brantley v. Thompson, 216 Ga. 164, 166 (115 SE2d 533) it was held: “That portion of Code Ann. § 6-902 which we have quoted above authorized and empowered the Clerk of the Superior Court of Ware County to accept and mark ‘tendered’ these bills of exceptions only when Judge Roddenberry was actually absent from his circuit; and until the contrary appears, it will be conclusively presumed that such clerk, as a public officer not only acted within the scope of his legal authority but acted properly in the performance of such duty and only when authorized so to act.” A question arises as to whether a contrary state of facts appears here from the certificate of Judge Lilly attached to the motion to dismiss stating that he was not absent from the circuit at the time, and that he was not incapacitated to act after August 27. The general rule is that the appellate court may not consider even a supplemental certificate by the judge signing the original bill of exceptions which changes or modifies recitals of fact therein. Woolf v. State, 104 Ga. 536 (3) (30 SE 796). If Judge Lilly’s statement is to be considered (where it does not purport to be a certification of the bill of exceptions, but to controvert the recital in the bill that “there [was] no judge authorized by law to certify a bill of exceptions within the circuit where the case is pending”) the bill of..exceptions was not properly tendered to the clerk of court
Dismissed. Felton, C. J., and Bell, P. J., concur.