47 Ga. App. 693 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1933
This ease was disposed of by nonsuit on October 27, 1931. A bill of exceptions was tendered to the trial judge within due time. This bill of exceptions was held until after the trial judge went out of office the first of the year, in 1933, and was finally certified by the trial judge with this note: “I further certify that the above bill of exceptions was presented to me within the time required by law and that the same became mislaid or lost by me and that the cause of the same not having been signed and certified in time was not due to the negligence of the plaintiff in error and was in no way the fault of the plaintiff or his attorney.” This bill of exceptions was presented in time for it to have been certified and sent up to the March term of this court, 1932. Coun-. sel for plaintiff in error states in his brief that he “ repeatedly tried to get the judge to get up the bill of exceptions, and the judge would say to him that he would hunt up the same.” It also ap
The facts of this case are more aggravated than those of the Duke v. Kelley case, supra. Section 6187, supra, construed in the light of the other sections does not excuse the plaintiff in error from exercising due diligence in seeking the remedies provided by law for the proper prosecution of his writ of error.
Writ of error dismissed.