83 Ga. 448 | Ga. | 1889
"When this case was here before, it having been brought here by the defendants in error, (76 Ga. 181,) the main question decided and adjudicated by this court as a question of law was, that the city of Atlanta
It is insisted here by counsel for the plaintiff in error that the first judgment of this court reversing the court below, was not res adjudicata, inasmuch as the judgment reviewed here was the refusal of the court to grant an interlocutory order for injunction. Where the whole case is adjudicated by this court upon a question of law, the judgment is a final judgment, and is not the subject-matter of review in that ease. The Supreme Court of the United States, in Commissioners, etc. v Lucas, 93 U. S. 113, determined, in a case which originated in the State of Indiana, where the Supreme Court of that State had reversed the circuit court for granting an injunction, and the decision of that court was
This docti’ine is also treated in Wells on .Res Adjudicata, p. 364, §441. Indeed it would seem to be self-evident, without the citation of authorities, that the former judgment of this court in this case between the same parties, which judgment determined the law of the case against the plaintiff in error, would be a finality. The defendants in error sought a perpetual injunction; the court below refused to grant the injunction, upon the ground that the city had the right to make these assessments and issue these executions. This court reversed that judgment of the court below, and the only question in the case is as to the power of the city of Atlanta to ma.ke these assessments, and to issue execution against the property of the defendants for the collection of the same. When, therefore, this court determined that no such power or authority resided in the city of Atlanta by virtue of the laws of this State, it decided the whole case between these parties. Hence we decline to go into the present record, and we hold that the whole matter between these parties has been adjudicated.
It may be that counsel for the plaintiff in error misapprehended the former adjudications of this court. It has been said that the decision of the superior court upon an interlocutory decree by the judge of that court,