164 Ga. 260 | Ga. | 1927
The Walker County Fertilizer Company, on July
No demurrer was filed by the defendants to the petition in this case. No question is raised as to the plaintiff’s right to the equitable remedy of injunction. But the parties went to trial on the petition and answer, and submitted evidence. That evidence showed that a judgment had been rendered for the Walker County Fertilizer Company against the petitioner, Mrs. Wright, that her husband, who was agent for her in this matter, within four days after the judgment was rendered, made and filed an appeal with bond, in which bond there was the recital that the costs had been paid. It appears from the evidence of the husband, that at the time of entering the appeal he gave to the justice, the trial magistrate, a cheek for the costs, “telling him at the time that I did not have the money in the bank to cover the check, and requested him to date the check a few days later. The magistrate replied, ‘That will be all right’.” The magistrate made an entry on his docket, showing the appeal to the superior court. Afterwards this witness testified he went back to the magistrate, and the magistrate told him that he had sent the appeal to the superior court; that he (the husband) was not aware that it had never been transmitted to the superior court; thaf search was made in the office of the clerk of the superior court for the appeal papers, but they could not be found there. The magistrate testified: “I am the magistrate who tried the original case described in the pleadings in this case.
Under these facts we’ are of the opinion that the petitioner, having made a bona ffde attempt to enter an appeal, and the trial justice having actually made an entry of appeal on the docket of his court, after having received the check given him by the husband of the defendant in the judgment, the case should be regarded as pending on appeal in the superior court; and the verdict finding that the defendant was not entitled to such equitable relief should have been set aside and a new trial granted. It is true that where the losing party in a justice’s court desires to enter an appeal to the superior court or to a jury in the justice’s court, the prepayment of the costs or the making and filing of an affidavit in forma pauperis is a prerequisite to the right to appeal. But we are of the opinion that where the justice, accepted a check, as in this case, from the agent of the party desiring to appeal, he could not after-wards revoke that order or cancel or destroy its effect by making
In the case of Lyner v. Jackson, 20 Ga. 773, it was held: “If the clerk of the court writes an appeal bond',1 reciting that all costs have been paid, and presents it to the appellant and his security for their signature, tenders no bill for costs and makes no demand of them of the appellant, and all the circumstances of the case show that it might be fairly presumed that the appellant had settled with the clerk for the costs, and the clerk puts the case on the appeal docket, the appeal will not be dismissed, although the costs have not been paid, and the clerk makes a memorandum at the margin of the bond of the amount due for the costs.”
It follows from what is said above and the authorities cited and quoted from, that the case of Walker County Fertilizer Company against Mrs. Wright should have been treated as pending on appeal in the superior court, although the papers had not been actually left in the office of the clerk of that court, for the papers were found in the office of the ordinary; but the appellant would have had the right to have the appeal papers delivered to the proper officer and the appeal entered on the docket of the superior court, unless barred by laches, and it is not urged that she was so'barred. The evidence submitted on the trial did not authorize a verdict in favor of the defendants, and the judgment refusing a new trial must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.