Summary
In Smith v. Gwinnett County, 247 Ga. App. 888 (545 S.E.2d 147) (2001), the appellants appealed their convictions in Gwinnett County Recorder's Court for violating a local ordinance by filing a petition for certiorari in the State Court of Gwinnett County. The county moved to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction, and the state court granted the motion.
Summary of this case from Sawyer v. City of AtlantaOpinion
A00A2498.
DECIDED: FEBRUARY 7, 2001
DECIDED FEBRUARY 7, 2001.
Writ of certiorari. Gwinnett State Court. Before Judge Fuller.
Harrison Harrison, G. Hughel Harrison, Samuel H. Harrison, for appellants.
Kristina H. Blum, Melinda K. Wells, Karen G. Thomas, Rosanna M. Szabo, for appellants.
A Gwinnett County recorder's court found C. W. Smith and Bobby Cochran guilty of violating a Gwinnett County ordinance. Smith and Cochran appealed the convictions by filing a petition for writ of certiorari in the State Court of Gwinnett County. In the petition, Smith and Cochran raised the sufficiency of the evidence and other grounds. Gwinnett County moved to dismiss the petition. It claimed that Smith and Cochran had failed to assert errors by the trial court with specificity, urged that the correct burden of proof had been applied by the recorder's court, and essentially denied Smith's and Cochran's other allegations. After hearing arguments, the state court dismissed the petition without stating its reasons for doing so. Smith and Cochran appeal from that dismissal.
1. Smith and Cochran correctly contend that the state court lacked jurisdiction to consider their petition for writ of certiorari. As this Court recently decided, a state court is without jurisdiction to consider a petition for writ of certiorari from a conviction in the recorder's court. Instead, such an appeal is to be made by writ of certiorari to the superior court. The state court, therefore, lacked jurisdiction over the case.
We note that Smith and Cochran did not waive this argument by filing the petition in the state court; a judgment on a matter not within a court's jurisdiction is void, even if the appellant erroneously filed the petition in that court, and even if he did not challenge jurisdiction below. Smith v. Gwinnett County, 246 Ga. App. 865, 866 (1) (S.E.2d) (2000).
Id.
Id. at 867 (1) (b); see generally Henson v. DeKalb County, 158 Ga. App. 348, 349 ( 280 S.E.2d 393) (1981).
Where an appeal is filed in a court which has no jurisdiction to entertain it, dismissal is proper. Because the state court dismissed Smith's and Cochran's appeal, there was no error.
Zornes v. State, 262 Ga. 757, 759 (2) ( 426 S.E.2d 355) (1993); see generally In the Interest of A. D. B., 232 Ga. App. 697 ( 503 S.E.2d 596) (1998); Henson, supra.
This Court cannot indulge Smith's and Cochran's request that we review the recorder's court decision on the merits. There is no right of direct appeal from a county recorder's court to the Court of Appeals. The recorder's court decision is reviewable only by application for a writ of certiorari in superior court, and review of the superior court's decision thereafter is only by discretionary appeal application to this Court. These procedures have not been followed.
Russell v. City of East Point, 261 Ga. 213 ( 403 S.E.2d 50) (1991).
Henson, supra; Castor v. DeKalb County, 180 Ga. App. 772 ( 350 S.E.2d 487) (1986).
2. In light of the foregoing, Smith's and Cochran's enumeration of error concerning the state court's admission of certain evidence is moot.
Judgment affirmed. Smith, P.J., and Phipps, J., concur.