Lowe & Brother sued Harris & Bussey on several promissory notes. To that action a plea was filed by counsel, who signed the plea as attorneys for Harris & Bussey. This plea not having been sworn to, the court overruled it, and rendered judgment by default. Thereupon execution issued, and was levied on certain property, to which Bussey interposed a claim in behalf of his wife, alleging that the property belonged to her. After that term of the court, he came in and by his motion alleged that, since the last term, he had been informed that the sheriff had returned that he had made personal service upon him, when in fact no service had been made upon him. The sheriff answered that he did serve him; and this answer was traversed by Bussey. The ease was entered upon the motion docket of the city court. The judge of the city court set a particular time to call the motion docket, at which time the docket was accordingly called, and no counsel appearing for Harris & Bussey, the judge dismissed the case. Harris & Bussey then moved to have the case reinstated and entered upon the issue docket, which motion the court refused; whereupon they excepted.
The act of September 25th, 1883, (acts 1882-3, p. *67856,) provides that the clerks of the superior courts shall keep “an issue docket, on which shall he placed all civil cases pending in their respective courts, in which an issue to he tried by a jury is made or likely to be made;” and “a motion docket, on which shall be placed only those motions which are to be decided by the judge without the intervention of a jui’y.” Under this law, the case, instead of being entered on the motion docket, should have been entered upon the issue docket, and hence there was no necessity for the counsel of Harris & Hussey to appear at the time the motion docket was called; they had a right to believe that the case had been entered properly by the clerk upon the issue docket. It makes no difference that this case was not in the superior court but was in the city court; for the act constituting the city court of Atlanta makes all laws which have been or may hereafter be passed in relation to the practice in the superior courts, applicable to the city court. And we think that, even without such provision in the city court act, this statute would be applicable to the city court.
"While we think the court did right to dismiss the case from the motion docket, if the case was not properly on that docket but belonged on the issue docket, we think, nevertheless, that the case should not have been dismissed out- of the court; but that the court should have directed the case to be entered upon the issue docket. So while we affirm the judgment of the court below, we direct that the case bo entered upon the issue docket, and there stand for trial according to law.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.