In our opinion of August 22, 1955,
Many of the facts related by petitioner and relied upon by him in support of his prayer for relief appear in our earlier opinion and it is unnecessary to repeat them. Furthermore, it is obvious that, insofar as the petition seeks a remedial order as to events occurring during the progress of the prosecution up to and including the trial and the verdict of guilty on April 25, 1955, this court is without power, on an application for writ of mandamus, to review alleged errors on the part of the trial judge, for the reason that an appeal in due course from the final judgment will adequately present to us the question of whether error has intervened. This follows as a matter of law, because a petition for a writ of mandamus is not available for use as an appeal. It is an extraordinary remedy to be granted only in extraordinary cases. As the Supreme Court said, in Ex parte Fahey,
It is clear, then, .that the specific question confronting us is whether we should issue á writ of extraordinary character to prevent the entry of a final judgment, in view.of the fact that it appears undisputed from the sworn, averments of the petition, not contradicted, ' that such áction is likely to bring on' another heart attack, which may' be fatal to petitioner. The intrinsic weakness in petitioner’s case lies in the fact, that, after his motion for new trial had been overruled, he filed no application in the trial court for postponement of sentence and made no showing by affidavits'of doctors or of other persons, in support of a postponement or continuance but came to this court immediately for a writ of mandamus. Such a writ, says the Supréme Court in State of. Virginia v. Rives,
The stay heretofore entered is vacated and the petition is dismissed at the cost of petitioner.
