Earnhart v. Atlanta & West Point Railroad

Lumpkin, J.

The bill of exceptions in this case, -which complained of a final judgment, was certified by the judge on September 2, 1908, and was marked filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court on the same day. It was not filed in the office of the clerk of this court until February 20, 1909, sometime after the Atlanta circuit, to which it belonged, had been concluded, and after the arguments of all cases for that term had been finished and the docket closed. Nothing was done with the case by this court during the October term, 1908, but it was docketed by the clerk with the cases of the March term, 1909. When the Atlanta circuit for that term was reached, a motion was made to dismiss the case, or strike it from the docket. In transmitting the record, the clerk of the superior court appended the following statement to the usual certificate. “The record in this case was not sent up in time, because the bill of exceptions, when filed in this office by the deputy clerk, was mislaid by him, and no one else in this office knew of the filing until counsel for plaintiff in error called my attention to it a few days ago. The deputy clerk was a very sick man, and was not on duty then, but was just sitting in the office. He has since died. His mind was not sound then.”

This ease is controlled by the decision in Savannah Electric Co. v. Tuck, 132 Ga. 48 (63 S. E. 800), and must be dismissed. The ruling there made is not only conclusive as authority, but is sound in principle. The constitution requires all cases to be disposed of at the first or second term of this court, and that “in *61ease the plaintiff in error shall not be prepared at the first term to prosecute the ease — unless prevented by providential cause, — it shall be stricken from the docket, and the judgment below shall stand affirmed.” What is the first term, to which ordinary cases are returnable? This question is answered by the case of Logan v. Western & Atlantic R. Co., 86 Ga. 493 (13 S. E. 586), where it was held by the entire bench that “The return term fixed by law for all ordinary bills of exceptions is the first term of this court which begins after the expiration of thirty days from the filing of such bills of exceptions in the clerk’s office of the court below.” See also Bank of Culloden v. Bank of Forsyth, 119 Ga. 351 (46 S. E. 434); Temple Baptist Church v. Georgia Terminal Company, 138 Ga. 669, 673 (58 S. E. 157). The legislature made certain provisions in regard to delay in transmission of the record and bill of exceptions by the clerk of the trial court. The Civil Code, §5571, provides for two eases: (1) Where the'bill of exceptions and copy of the record shall reach the clerk of the Supreme Court before this court shall have finished the circuit to which the case belongs. (3) Where the bill of exceptions and copy of the record shall not reach the clerk of the Supreme Court before the cases from the circuit to which it belongs shall have been disposed of. In the latter event it was declared that the case should be docketed for the next term of the Supreme Court and then heard with the cases from the circuit to which said case belongs. The second of these provisions has several times been said by this court to be unconstitutional. Davis v. Bennett, 73 Ga. 763; Temple Baptist Church v. Georgia Terminal Co., supra; Savannah Electric Co. v. Tuck, supra. It was urged that the certificate of the clerk in transmitting the record (dated February 30, 1909), showed that when the bill of exceptions was filed with the deputy clerk of the court, it was mislaid by him, that he was a very sick man then and was not on duty, but was just sitting in the office, and that his mind was not sound. If the action of the deputy clerk was invalid as an official action, then it would seem that the bill of exceptions was not lawfully filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court within the time prescribed by law, as the only filing consisted in the delivery of the paper to him and the entry made by him thereon. If he was capable of filing the paper, his mislaying it could not be treated as unofficial. But aside from this, *62accidents or misfortunes of the clerk of the superior court, or his deputies, can not change the time when by law cases must be returned to this court and heard. It was urged that the first term of this court, within the meaning of the law, did not arrive before the papers were filed in the office of the clerk of the Supreme Court. But such a ruling would not make a definite time for the return of cases to this court, but would leave the time for their return and hearing to depend upon accident, misfortune, convenience, or even caprice of the clerks of the superior court, in transmitting records and bills of exceptions. As said by Chief Justice Bleckley, in Logan v. Western & Atlantic R. Co., supra, “Any other construction would put it in the power of the clerk of the superior court to fix the return term of many cases by using more or less dispatch in making out the transcript and in forwarding it and the bill of exceptions to this court.”

It is said that it would be a hardship for a litigant to suffer on account of the misfortune or sickness of the deputy clerk. But the same might be said if the clerk or his deputy failed to record a deed or mortgage, or a lien, so as to give notice to the world, or if he failed to issue process so that the defendant might be brought into court, or failed to issue execution so as to levy on property before it was removed from the jurisdiction. All of these things might happen from sickness or misfortune, as well as from carelessness. The motion to dismiss and strike the case from the docket must be sustained.

Ordered accordingly.

All the Justices concur, except Beck, J., absent.