The sole assignment of error in the remaining special ground is, that the trial court erred in refusing to charge: “That you gentlemen of the jury may, if you find the defendant guilty, recommend that he be punished, as for a misdemeanor,” the criticism being that the charge, which was timely requested in writing, was pertinent and applicable to the facts in the case.
The record, separate and apart from the motion for new trial, shows that the defendant’s written request, after quoting the desired instruction, stated that the movant contended that sec. 2 of the act of 1939 (Ga. L. 1939, pp. 285, 287; Code, Ann., § 27-2501), in so far as the same pertains to robbery by force not being reducible to a misdemeanor, violates article III, section VII, paragraph VIII, of the State Constitution (Code, Ann., § 2-1908), in that it contains matter different from that expressed in the title to the act.
Every ground of a motion for new trial must be complete within itself.
Dowdell
v.
State,
200
Ga.
775 (3) (
Furthermore, this court will never pass upon the constitutionality of an act of the General Assembly unless it clearly appears in the record that the point was directly and properly made in the court below and distinctly passed on by the trial' judge.
Brown
v.
State,
114
Ga.
60 (2) (
In the present case the most the plaintiff in error can contend for is that the trial court’s refusal to charge as requested was by inference or implication a judgment holding that sec. 2 of the act of 1939 was constitutional. “There can be no order or judgment by inference or implication that can be the subject of review by an appellate court.”
Putnam Mills
&c.
Co.
v.
Stonecypher,
151
Ga.
14, 15 (
*114
Applying the foregoing principles to the facts in the present case, the only question that this court can determine is whether the trial court erred in refusing to give the requested charge because it was pertinent and applicable to the facts in the case, and in the present trial on an indictment for robbery by force the court did not err in refusing to charge that the jury could recommend punishment as for a misdemeanor, since sec. 2 of the act of 1939, authorizing in some felony cases such a recommendation, which the judge may follow if he “sees proper” in fixing the punishment, expressly excepts certain named felonies .that can not be so reduced, and “robbery by force” is included among the stated exceptions.
Singleton
v.
State,
196
Ga.
136 (1) (
Judgment affirmed.
