16 Ga. App. 30 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
The plaintiff in error was convicted upon an accusation charging a violation of the prohibition law, and made a motion for a new trial. The motion was overruled on January 24, 1914, and thereafter a bill of exceptions was presented. The bill of exceptions was certified by the judge (as appears by the date of his certificate) on February 21, 1914. A motion was made to dismiss the bill of exceptions upon the ground that it was not tendered and signed within twenty days from January 24, 1914, as required by the provisions of section 6153 of the Civil Code; and this motion must be sustained., Counsel for the plaintiff in error, in support of their contention that the bill of exceptions should not be dismissed, rely upon the decisions in Moore v. Kelly & Jones Co., 109 Ga. 798 (35 S. E. 168), and in Taliaferro v. Smiley, 112 Ga. 62 (37 S. E. 106), and contend that there is nothing in the record to show that the delay of the judge in signing the bill of exceptions was caused by the plaintiff in error or his counsel.
If there were anything in the record to indicate that this bill of exceptions was in fact tendered to the trial judge within twenty
The requirements as to the time within which bills of exceptions must be tendered, served, and sent up are imperative; for upon compliance with these requirements depends this court’s jurisdiction to consider the writ of error, and the motion to dismiss in the present cases raises the same question as that presented to the Supreme Court in American Mortgage Co. v. Walker, 115 Ga. 738 (42 S. E. 59), in which it was held that it must affirmatively appear that the bill of exceptions was tendered within the time prescribed by law, and in which Presiding Justice Lumpkin held that this all-important jurisdictional fact is not a legitimate subject of bare presumption, and that when it is not made to affirmatively appear, either from the bill of exceptions or from the transcript of the record, the writ of error must be dismissed. Numerous decisions of the Supreme Court on this point were cited and construed by Chief Justice Simmons in Evans v. State, 112 Ga. 763 (38 S. E. 78).
Hnder the provisions of section 6153 of the Civil Code, and section 1102 of the Penal Code, criminal cases must be brought up
If this had been a case not governed by the law as to “fast” writs of error, the tendering of the bill of exceptions would have been in time, but since it is a criminal case it is covered by.the provisions of section 6153, which prescribes that the bill of exceptions shall be tendered “within twenty days from the rendition” of the judgment upon which error is assigned, irrespective of whether the term of court has expired; and for this reason this court has held that in such cases assignments of error which must be presented as special exceptions must either be preserved by exceptions pendente lite, or be presented in a bill of exceptions certified within twenty days from the ruling of which complaint is made. Wheeler v. State, 4 Ga. App. 325 (61 S. E. 409).
Writ of error dismissed■.