Pendergrass v. Duke

Decision Date16 May 1917
Docket Number413.
Citation92 S.E. 649,147 Ga. 10
PartiesPENDERGRASS v. DUKE.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

Syllabus by the Court.

From the present record, and from the records of this court, it appears that one judge presided the first week of a term of court. Before him the present case was tried, and by consent the jury returned into court their verdict on Monday morning of the second week, at which time a different judge was presiding. A motion for a new trial was presented to the second judge, who declined to sign a rule nisi thereon, on the ground that this should be done by the judge who tried the case. A rule nisi was then obtained from the first judge and the motion again presented to the second judge, with request that he also sign the rule nisi. He again declined for the same reason above stated. The motion thus made was duly prosecuted, and a new trial refused. The movant excepted, and the respondent by cross-bill assigned error on the refusal of the court to sustain her motion to dismiss the motion for a new trial because the rule nisi thereon was not signed by the judge who was presiding when the application therefor was made; and this court reversed the judgment on the cross-bill of exceptions, holding that the court below should have dismissed the motion for a new trial because he was without jurisdiction to entertain it. Pendergrass v Duke, 140 Ga. 550, 79 S.E. 129. The plaintiff in error then filed an extraordinary motion for a new trial, which was overruled, the case again brought to this court by writ of error, and it was held that "the mistake of the judge to whom the motion made in term time was presented, as to his want of jurisdiction to entertain the motion, is not ground for the grant of a new trial upon extraordinary motion." Pendergrass v. Duke, 143 Ga. 257, 84 S.E. 447. The verdict and judgment involved in these cases were rendered at the February term, 1912. On March 26, 1915, the judge to whom the motion for a new trial was originally presented signed what purported to be nunc pro tunc orders, one a rule nisi on the motion presented to him at the February term, 1912, and the other an additional order giving movant until the hearing, whenever it might be, to perfect and file for approval a brief of the evidence. The rule was made returnable before the judge who presided when the case was tried. The motion was amended and came on for a hearing, when it was dismissed by the court below, on the...

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