Court Opinion

ID: 5582142
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 01:42:33.793664+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:07.044549
License: Public Domain

Beck, P. J.
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
1. Upon the motion to recommit an issue of fact was raised, and the court heard evidence touching the same. Upon considering the evidence submitted upon this issue it does not appear that the court erred in refusing to recommit for another hearing by the auditor.
2. The motion to continue was based upon the ground that the leading counsel was absent. It was shown that the leading counsel was a judge of the city court in-another county, and that on the day of the hearing he was holding the regular quarterly term of that court. Other retained counsel were present and participated in the trial. All applications for continuances are addressed to the sound legal discretion of the court, and, if not expressly provided for, shall be granted or refused, as the ends of justice may require. Civil Code, § 5724. “Illness or absence, from providential cause, of counsel where there is but one, or of the leading counsel where there are more than one, shall be a sufficient ground for continuance: Provided, the party making the application will swear that he cannot go safely to trial without the services of such absent counsel, and that he expects his services at the next term, *727and that said application is not made for delay only.” Civil Code, § 5718. It does not appear that the court abused its discretion in refusing a continuance. The discretion with which the court is invested in such "matters will be interfered with only in extreme cases. Sealy v. State, 1 Ga. 213 (44 Am. D. 641); Cotton States Life Insurance Co. v. Edwards, 74 Ga. 220.
3. While the intervention in this case showed merely an alleged indebtedness upon certain promissory notes and prayed a judgment for- that amount, nevertheless it was an intervention in a suit of an equitable nature, the original petition being of that character. Applying the rule that the intervenor takes the case as he finds it, we are of the opinion that the issue made before the auditor partook of the nature of the original case, and should he treated, as regards the hearing, as a case in equity; and that being "true, the court was authorized to dispose of the exceptions of fact without the intervention of a jury. Weed v. Railroad Co., 119 Ga. 576 (46 S. E. 885); Charleston &c. Railway Co. v. Pope, 122 Ga. 577 (50 S. E. 374).
4. The auditor filed his report on November 13,1916. On December 2, 1916, the motion to recommit was made, and this was overruled on December 11, 1916. The exceptions both of law and fact had been filed within twenty days after the filing of his report by the auditor. The regular September term of the superior court had been adjourned to the first Monday in December, 1916. But, as appears from the recitals in the bill of exceptions, when it came to the knowledge of the court that the report of the auditor had been filed just twenty days prior to that time, “it was ordered by the judge of that court that the adjourned term be postponed until the second Monday in December, that is until December 11th, in order that such exceptions as might he filed in the matter could then be passed upon by the court.” The motion for a continuance was then made, and was overruled. Counsel for the intervenor then insisted that the exceptions to the auditor’s report could not be tried and disposed of at the term of court then in session, the September adjourned term. The court ruled adversely to this contention, and called the matter up for hearing and disposed of it. We are of the opinion that it was competent for the court to rule' the case to trial at that term. There is no statute providing in express terms when the exceptions to the report of an auditor in *728eases like this shall'be heard. But where the trial term of the main case is past, and the report of the auditor has been filed twenty days before the hearing, and exceptions have been filed, the case is ripe for trial. Counsel for the plaintiff in error have called as to matters not in the record, where it is provided that exceptions attention to section 5136 of the Civil Code, relating to exceptions as to any matter not appearing on the face of the record or brief of evidence, or in the report itself, shall be certified to be true by the auditor within forty days after the report is filed; and wfiere provisions are made for further steps in regard to such exceptions. The hearing in the present case was had within forty days of the filing of the report. We do not think that the provisions of the code section last referred to avail counsel for plaintiff in error here, as counsel did not suggest to the court that they intended to file exceptions as to any matters not appearing on the face of the record, or move for a postponement of the hearing that they might make such exceptions; nor is it made to appear here that there are such exceptions. Had they made such a motion, the overruling of it would have raised a different question from that we are now passing upon.
5. There were numerous exceptions to the rulings of the auditor, as set forth in his report, upon the admission and exclusion of evidence. Many of these are not referred to in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff in error, and are therefore treated as abandoned. In those exceptions which are referred to in the brief of counsel the evidence alleged to have been erroneously admitted or excluded is not set forth either literally or in substance, and therefore the assignments of error are insufficient to raise a question for decision. -This has been expressly ruled in several cases. National Bauxite Co. v. Republic Mining &c. Co., 146 Ga. 530 (91 S. E. 781).
6. Hnder all the evidence in the case the Judge was authorized to find against the exceptions of fact, and to sustain the findings of the auditor to the effect that the intervenor was not entitled to recover;

Judgment affirmed.

All the Justices concur, except Fish, O. J., absent.