Opinion
58163.
SUBMITTED JULY 11, 1979.
DECIDED SEPTEMBER 4, 1979.
Garnishment. Floyd Superior Court. Before Judge Frazier.
C. Ronald Patton, for appellant.
Douglas Slade, for appellees.
The order appealed from provides: "This is a garnishment action. The defendant filed a traverse to the plaintiffs' affidavit and a hearing was held. The court after consideration of the argument of counsel and briefs submitted hereby SUSTAINS the traverse and dissolves the garnishment."
As no evidence was introduced and the record consists only of the affidavit and the traverse, both of which are in the form prescribed by Code Ann. § 46-605, and no reason for the sustaining of the traverse can be gleaned from the record, the judgment must be reversed.
While there are various contentions in the briefs as to what has, or has not, transpired, and as to what is, or is not, the law as applied to those variously hypothecated states of fact, none of this appears of record, and "assertions of counsel as to what transpired below cannot take the place of the record or transcript..." Dual S. Enterprises v. Webb, 138 Ga. App. 810, 816 ( 227 S.E.2d 418) (1976). "The appellate courts simply cannot nor are they authorized by law to infer from statements of counsel in their briefs facts which never managed an introduction into or even a nodding acquaintance with the record." Airport Assoc. v. Audioptic c., Inc., 125 Ga. App. 325, 326 ( 187 S.E.2d 567) (1972).
Judgment reversed. McMurray, P. J., and Banke, J., concur.