DocketNumber: 44341; 44363
Judges: Eberhardt
Filed Date: 4/7/1969
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/7/2024
Appellants qualified as write-in candidates for the office of Treasurer of Cobb County in the general election held November 5, 1968. Two others likewise qualified as write-in candidates, or attempted to do so. One of the others, Peggy J. Westmoreland, received the highest write-in vote, and James W. Cooper recieved the second highest number of votes. DeFee filed his election contest, contending that neither Westmoreland nor Cooper had complied with the
At a hearing on the contest proceeding a motion to dismiss both the contest of DeFee and the cross action of Greenway was sustained, and both appeal. Held:
1. It is provided in Art. XI, Sec. I, Par. VI of the Constitution of 1945 (Code Ann. § 2-7806) that “the General Assembly . . . may abolish the office of County Treasurer in any county . . .” Pursuant thereto the General Assembly did (Ga. L. 1965, p. 3216) abolish the office of Treasurer of Cobb County. There was no attack on the constitutionality of the Act in the trial court and, indeed, none is attempted on appeal. Consequently, it appears that the office to which appellants sought election as write-in candidates did not then exist and does not now exist. Dismissal of the contest proceeding was proper.
2. Appellants urge that the motion to dismiss which the trial court sustained was made orally and that since the Civil Practice Act requires that motions be in writing and that these be served on opposing parties, the sustaining of the oral motion to dismiss was error. Code Ann. § 81A-107(b) (1) provides that “unless made during a hearing or trial, [motions] shall be made in writing.” We can see no inhibition to the grant of the oral motion here, which was made at the hearing, and which we perceive was properly sustained. Neither the contest nor the cross action stated a claim upon which relief could be granted. Any effort to grant the relief sought would be a vain and useless procedure—which the law neither requires nor does. Lex non frustra facit. The law will not, itself, attempt to do that which would be fruitless. Ray v. Cobb County Bd. of Educ., 110 Ga. App. 258, 264 (138 SE2d
Judgments affirmed.