This case arises upon a bill of exceptions from . the city court of Macon. When the case was called, the solicitor-general moved to dismiss it, upon the ground that this court had no jurisdiction to entertain a writ of error from the city court of Macon, because, first, that court, established by the act of August 14, 1885 (Acts 1884 — 5, p. 470), was not a “like court” to the city court of Atlanta'or that of Savannah; and, second, the act establishing the court did not locate it in the city of Macon. The motion to dismiss was reserved. After reargument of the motion, by counsel interested in other cases pending here from the city court of Macon, we have come to the conclusion that the grounds of the motion to dismiss are not well taken. The motion is therefore denied.
1—3. Under the constitution of this State, writs of error lie to this court from the superior courts of the State and from “ the city courts of Atlanta and Savannah and such other like courts as may be . . established in other cities.” We have examined the act creating the city court of Macon, and the act creating the city court of Atlanta which was in force at the time of the adoption of the present constitution. Without the use of parallel columns and without going into details, we will simply state that we tbink the acts ' are substantially alike. There is, of course, some difference in detail, but the courts established are, in constitution, practice, and procedure, substantially the same. We think that the constitution, by the expression “like courts,” does not mean courts identical in
The gravest doubt is raised by the second ground of the motion to dismiss. This court has held in several cases that a city court, to come within the clause of the constitution above quoted, must be located in a city; and the question is whether the act establishing the city court of Macon, taking all of its provisions together, can be so construed as to show an intention to establish the court in the city of Macon. It was argued that the act itself requires us to construe it to the contrary, because the forty-fourth section of it provides that the county commissioners of the county shall provide a suitable place for the holding of the court. The solicitor-general argued that this shows that the court was not located in the city of Macon, and that, under it, the commissioners had power to locate the court outside the city of Macon in the county of Bibb, over the whole of which county the court had jurisdiction. We think that the act will not bear that construction. The board of commissioners of Bibb county, under the act creating the board, have control of county affairs and public buildings. It is the duty of the commissioners to provide suitable accommodations in the court-house for the public officers of the county. When this court' was established, there may have been no suitable place prepared in the court-house for holding the court. It may have been that the ordinary, the superior court, the clerk, and the sheriff occupied all of the offices in the court-house which had been properly furnished, and it may have been that the superior court occupied the courtroom all of the time as at that time there was sufficient litigation to keep the superior court engaged nearly all of the year. If this was true, the legislature and the draftsman of the bill must, through the representatives of Bibb county, have had knowledge of it. This section of the act may, therefore, have been placed in it in order to compel the commissioners to provide a suitable place in the court-house for the newly established court which was to be a city court. Or the clause may have been placed in the act in order that there might be nó doubt as to the authority or as to the dpty of the commissioners to provide a place for holding the court. It was a wise provision to insert in the act, and was not intended, in our opinion, to give the commissioners power to provide a place for holding the court outside of the court-house and of the city.
Section 4360 of the Civil Code requires the clerk of the superior court to keep his office and all things belonging thereto at the county, site ,and at the court-house. The twenty-third section of the act
In response to the contention that the General Assembly could not, by the act of February 21, 1876 (Acts 1876, p. 96), constitutionally extend the jurisdiction of the city court of Atlanta over the whole of Fulton county and that this act was void, or that, if this be not so, the court ceased to be a “city court” whose errors this •court could correct upon a direct bill of exceptions, it is sufficient to cite the case of Whittendale v. Dixon, 70 Ga. 721. But, aside from this, the matter was certainly one over which the sovereign people had full control, with power to deal with it as they saw fit. It is the plain duty of this court to carry out the will of the people :as expressed in the fundamental law. Before the constitutional convention of 1877 met or the present constitution was ratified, the legislature had undertaken to extend the jurisdiction of the city court of Atlanta. It can not be doubted that the reference to this •court in the constitution meant the court as it stood after the pas
4. This brings us to a consideration of the merits of the case. The constitution of this State provides (art. 6, sec. 5) that “ In any county within which there is, or hereafter may be, a city court, the judge of said court and of the superior court may preside in the courts of each other in cases where the judge of either court is disqualified to preside.” The record of the present case discloses that the city court of Macon and the superior court of Bibb county were in session on the same day; and that the judge of the superior court was disqualified to try a certain case pending in his court, and, under the above-recited section of the constitution, called upon the judge of the city court to preside in the superior court and try the disqualified case. The judge of the city court left the bench of his court and went upon the bench of the superior court to try the case; whereupon the judge of the superior court went upon the bench of the city court and called the case of The State v. Ivey. The judge of the city court was not disqualified to try Ivey. The judge of the superior court presiding, Ivey was tried and convicted by a jury in the city court. The trial of the disqualified case in the superior court having been finished, the judge of the city court returned to the city court, and the judge of the superior court returned to his court. Thereupon the judge of the city court proceeded to sentence Ivey, who had, as just stated, been found guilty by the jury while the judge of the superior court was presiding in the city court. When sentence was about to be pronounced, Ivey, through Ms counsel, objected thereto, on the ground that the judge of the superior court had no power or authority to-preside in the trial of Ivey in the city court, the judge of that court-not being disqualified. The judge of the city court overruled the objection and pronounced sentence and judgment upon the verdict-