Rycroft v. Disharoon
Rycroft v. Disharoon
Opinion of the Court
The defendant Rycroft sold his home to Disharoon in March, 1966, but remained in possession under an oral agreement. On May 20 Disharoon informed the defendant by letter that under their agreement he was to move on June 1; that rent of $85 per month for two months was acknowledged; that plaintiff desired possession of the house but would give defendant an election to remain not longer than
1. Whether or not the laches of plaintiff’s counsel in failing to discover and move to vacate the order of dismissal would under the circumstances have barred the re-instatement of the case had it been properly urged before the trial court, it appears from the record that the defendant failed to avail himself of the opportunity to contest the re-instatement, and accordingly it can not be considered by this court. Graham v. Smith, 80 Ga. 676 (2) (7 SE 131).
2. As to the grant of the motion for summary judgment, the appellant argues only that it was error because the case had previously been dismissed for want of prosecution. Since the case had been thereafter re-instated, and since the grounds of the motion were not controverted, judgment was properly entered in favor of the plaintiff.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.