This case came on to be heard in the superior court of Fulton county, on a motion to reinstate the ease of Patience Jenkins v. City of Atlanta, wherein a nonsuit had been granted by the presiding judge of said court. When the motion to reinstate was called for trial in the court below, the City of Atlanta, the plaintiff in error here, moved to dismiss the motion on two grounds: 1. That the motion to reinstate did not lie where a nonsuit had been granted for lack of sufficient evidence. 2. That said motion could not be considered by said court, because no brief of evidence had been prepared upon which the court could pass as to whether or not this judgment was right or wrong. The motion to dismiss the motion to reinstate the case was overruled by the court, and an order granted reinstating the case; to which judgment the City of Atlanta excepted. The motion to reinstate was as follows: “The above-stated case came on for trial on the 8th day of December, 1910, at the regular November term, 1910, of Fulton superior court,' before the Honorable W. D. Ellis, judge of said court, presiding; and after the evidence for the plaintiff had all been introduced, the court granted a nonsuit in the case.Plaintiff insists that the granting of said nonsuit was error, and she comes now at the term of said court at which said nonsuit was granted, and moves the court to set aside and vacate the nonsuit, and to reinstate the case on the trial calendar.”
The right of the trial court to grant a nonsuit on motion of the defendant for failure, of proof was not recognized under strict common-law practice, because the plaintiff was deemed to have the right of trial by jury on the issues of fact. 6 Enc. PI. & Pr. 933. And this rule seems to obtain in many of the States, and in the Federal courts. Ibid. But a nonsuit in this State may be granted where at the close of the plaintiff’s case it appears that the plaintiff has failed to make out a prima facie case, or that, admitting the facts proved and all reasonable deductions therefrom, he ought not to recover. Civil Code (1910), § 5942. Should' the movant seeking to reinstate a case in which a nonsuit has been awarded by the court for insufficiency of evidence accompany his motion with a brief of the evidence? In the case of City of Atlanta v. Miller, 125 Ga. 495 (54 S. E. 538), Justice Lumpkin said: “Where a motion to reinstate a case is made, after a judgment of nonsuit based on the general insufficiency of the evidence to make out a case, the proper practice is to present a brief of the evidence along with the motion. But if the presiding judge based his judgment upon a single question of law, and enough of the evidence was set out for a clear understanding of such ruling, there was no error in entertaining the motion because it was not accompanied by a complete brief of the evidence. Certainly this will furnish no ground