The bill of exceptions in this case was brought to review the refusal of the judge of the superior court to sanction a petition for certiorari. The writ of error might well be dismissed for want of any assignment of error, but, in the absence of a mo*330tion to dismiss, the court will not dismiss this case of its own motion. It is not necessary to consider the errors alleged in the petition, or the evidence adduced on the trial as disclosed thereby, for it appears that there was no affidavit verifying the petition, and for that reason alone the action of the judge of the superior court in refusing to sanction the petition and to order the issuance of the writ of certiorari was right and proper. The Civil Code, §4638, expressly provides thát no writ of certiorari shall be granted and issued unless the applicant shall make the affidavit therein provided for. The making of this affidavit is therefore an indispensable prerequisite to a sanction by the judge. The above has been the uniform ruling of the Supreme Court, except in Ware v. Craven, 30 Ga. 35, and this section has been so strictly construed that the court held in Velvin v. Austin, 109 Ga. 200, that where one of several sureties made the affidavit and the others did not, he alone should he treated as plaintiff in certiorari. Section 4638 of the Civil Code is mandatory in its language. “No writ of certiorari shall be granted or issued, except to the court of ordinary, unless the party applying for the same, his agent or attorney, shall make and file with his petition” the affidavit incorporated in the section. We need go no further with this case, because §4638 does not need construction, nor do its plain terms require elaboration. It is not only not the privilege of the judge to sanction the petition for certiorari, in absence of the affidavit, hut it is his duty to do as Judge Sheffield did in this case, — to refuse to sanction. It is true that in the cáse of Ware v. Craven, supra, it was held that there was no necessity for verifying the points in the petition for certiorari; hut that decision was made in forgetfulness of the act of 1857, which is now embodied in the Civil Code as §4638. We have taken the pains to examine the original record in Ware v. Craven, and find that the cause originated after the passage of the act of 1857; and, no reference being made to it in the decision, it is apparent that the ruling discloses an oversight of that act. It. has been said that Homer sometimes nods; and though Judge Stephens was, without doubt, one of our greatest judges, he apparently overlooked the act of 1857 when he decided, in Ware v. Craven (in which the decision was rendered in 1860), that no affidavit is necessary. Every proceeding in the courts necessarily involves some delay, but the reason for the passage of the act of *3311857 was doubtless to prevent delays, as much as .possible, by requiring the petitioner to swear that his application was not made for the purpose of delay only. We apprehend this to be the intention of §4638, and no better instance can be cited to command the statute than the present petition, which seems absolutely without merit, and to have been made for the purpose of delay only. .
Judgment affirmed,.