19 Ga. App. 11 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
Error is assigned in this case upon the action of the trial court in allowing the plaintiff to dismiss his suit after the court had directed a verdict for the defendant, and the verdict as directed had been prepared and signed by the foreman of the jury, and after the plaintiff had been thus informed as to what the verdict would be, but before the verdict had been read by counsel for the defendant. The bill of exceptions makes the following recitals of fact: “The evidence in said case was introduced by both the
Notwithstanding it does not appear that the verdict signed by the foreman of the jury under the direction of the court had been delivered to counsel for the defendant, or to any other person directed by the court to receive it (Irvine v. Grant, 15 Ga. App. 269, 82 S. E. 819; Merchants Bank v. Rawls, 7 Ga. 191, 50 Am. D. 394), it is clear, from the recitals in the bill of exceptions, that the verdict signed by the foreman of the jury was known to counsel for the plaintiff before he interposed his motion to withdraw the case. As was said in Peoples Bank v. Exchange Bank, supra, “After a party has taken the chances of litigation and knows what is the actual result reached in the suit by the tribunal which is to pass upon it, he can not, by exercising his right of voluntary dismissal, deprive the opposite party of the victory thus gained. It is knowledge of the actual, not of the possible, result of a case which precludes the exercise of the right of dismissal.” It is further held in that case that “When a verdict in favor of the defendant has been reached but not returned into court, and the plaintiff in some way acquires actual knowledge of the finding, he can not'exercise his right to voluntarily dismiss.” The trial judge therefore erred in allowing the plaintiff to dismiss his action after the court had directed a verdict in favor of the defendant and this verdict had actually been signed by the foreman of the jury.
This was not a mere oral decision by the judge from which no appeal could be entered, but the decision had been entered in writing and signed by the proper official, and, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, had been duly published. Judgment reversed.