The Atlanta Lawyer June/July 2020 Vol. 19, No. 1 | Page 17

the course of the pandemic. One reason for the relatively low numbers could be that when the flu outbreak started Atlanta had already been experiencing elevator outages, store closings, and restricted theater hours as a result of wartime rationing of electricity. No reliable figures for infections or deaths due to influenza in the city exist because of the lack of both uniform reporting and standards for diagnosis. The U.S. Census Bureau lists 829 deaths for the pandemic. Lawyering in the Time of Pandemic Atlanta’s lawyers suffered like everyone else. The flu caused federal prosecutor Paul Carpenter to stay out of the office for two weeks. Carpenter, Chief Deputy Marshal Robert Ramspeck, and Deputy Marshal Bloodworth all caught the flu after a trip to Rome. Seven people in Carpenter’s household came down with the disease at the same time. Two relatives and two nurses helping care for the sick family became sick themselves. Carpenter told The Atlanta Constitution “that he does not desire any further acquaintance with the malady.” Influenza kept mayor-elect James L. Key from his law practice for ten days in November. Frank E. Smith and W.A. Hancock were reported to be missing from City Hall because of the flu. The flu disrupted operation of the courts. In the City of Atlanta Recorders Court Judge Johnson closed his courtroom to all but litigants. The Recorder’s Court functioned both as a court of law and major entertainment venue. “Hitherto from time immemorial the audience at the great show has been allowed to warm the benches in peace, but in the future fans of the police court will have to hie themselves to other locality for amusement,” The Atlanta Constitution reported on October 22. “For when the court opened on Monday, as usual there was a full audience which packed the room. When the recorder beheld the mob he arose and declared that on account of the influenza epidemic, all not having business in the court would have to depart. With a final look at the place which afforded them entertainment since the movies were closed, and with many a sigh, the audience filed out through the door.” Ross v. Garraux, 24 Ga. #App. 601 (1919) provides a window into disruptions the flu caused with trial courts. In Garraux the Court of Appeals forgave the failure of a movant for new trial to provide a record because of sickness. Counsel had told the City Court of Atlanta, “May it please your honor, we have no brief of the evidence in this case, and have not been able to prepare the motion for trial because the court reporter is ill, suffering from influenza, and has not written out the record. We do not know when he can furnish the record in this case. We want the time extended until he recovers and writes out the evidence and the charge.” After several subsequent continuances, the trial court dismissed the motion once the brief of evidence was filed on the ground that the brief had not been presented during the same term of court as the trial. The Court of Appeals reversed, finding implied consent to the numerous continuances in the failure of the opposing party to object. The appellant’s victory was short lived. The Supreme Court reinstated the dismissal the following year. See Garraux v. Ross, 150 Ga. 645 (1920). IN THE PROFESSION Courthouses functioned as supply houses of one popular treatment: whisky. On Monday, October 21, Grady Hospital appealed to the county police to provide the substance, no doubt for medical use only. “The Grady Hospital is in need of supply of whisky to be used in the treatment of Spanish flu cases and others of a similar nature,” reported the Constitution. The physician could not find any at the courthouse as the police had poured its stock down the sewer earlier in the day. “He was directed to apply at the Federal building, and it is probable that an effort will be made to secure a supply there.” Doctors sought whisky at courthouses because Georgia in 1907 prohibited the sale of alcohol well before national prohibition took effect with the adoption of the Eighteenth Amendment in 1920. The state continued to enforce prohibition until 1935, two years after repeal of national prohibition by the Twenty-first Amendment. (Georgia still has not ratified the Twentyfirst Amendment.) The seizure of illegal beverages resulted in large quantities being held by the government. In August 1919 The Atlanta Constitution reported that the United States Quartermaster Depot at the Candler warehouses stocked 1,758 gallons of bottledin-bond whisky appropriated by federal agents enforcing a ban on importing liquor from wet to dry states. The paper gushed, “Another feature of the good qualities of this particular stock is that it carries with it an absolute guarantee of the government. It has been recommended for uses in cases of the ‘flu’ and pneumonia.” Although the United States Pharmacopeia removed whisky as a palliative in 1916, many doctors continued to use it to treat flu. The widespread belief that military hospitals chiefly used whisky to treat the flu, Dr. W.A. Evans charged, had been started by the wholesale liquor industry. Two remarkable presidents headed the Atlanta Bar Association during the pandemic. Arthur G. Powell presided as the disease started to infect large numbers of people in 1918. The twelfth president of the Association, Powell remains the only person elected to two consecutive presidential terms. An outstanding lawyer, he left private practice in 1906 to become one of the first judges on the Court of Appeals created that year by constitutional amendment. He returned to private practice in 1912. Powell was president of the Georgia Bar Association, the predecessor of the State Bar of Georgia, in 1922. Eugene Black, Association president in 1919, became president the Atlanta Trust Company in 1921. He was appointed Governor of the Sixth Federal Reserve District in 1927. President Roosevelt in 1933 picked him to be Governor of the Federal Reserve Board. In that position he assisted the reorganization of banks across the country during the Great Depression. www.atlantabar.org THE ATLANTA LAWYER 17