101 Ga. 572 | Ga. | 1897
Dickey was charged by two separate accusations with the offenses, respectively, of assault and battery, and of carrying a concealed weapon. It appears that by consent the two cases were tried together before the same jury, at the same time, upon the issue formed upon each of such accusations. Pie was found guilty under each accusation, and a separate verdict rendered upon each charge, upon which separate judgments were also pronounced. Defendant then made a single motion for a new trial, praying that the verdict and judgment in each be set aside, which motion was overruled; whereupon the defendant excepted and sued out a writ of error to this court.
We have been unable to consider the case presented upon its merits, by reason of a lack of jurisdiction in this court to entertain the writ of error. In the present ease separate verdicts w;ere rendered, and necessarily separate judgments pronounced thereon in order that the findings of the jury might he carried into effect. The trial under each accusation was a separate and distinct prosecution; the verdict and judgment rendered in the one «were entirely separate and independent of those rendered in the other; in a word, although between the same parties, they were different cases; and while in a certain class of civil suits the law authorizes a consolidation thereof (Civil Code, §§4846, 4943), there is no authority of law for excepting in the same motion for a new trial to the rendition of two verdicts upon the trial of two separate criminal cases. On the contrary, to the setting aside of either of such verdicts, separate and independent motions are requisite. In the case of Western Assurance Co. v. Way, 98 Ga. 746, where the same plaintiff had two actions against different defendants, pending in the same court, the evidence in each so nearly identical as to render it practicable to try both cases together, and they were accordingly, with consent of counsel, consolidated, and the jury rendered a separate verdict against each of the defendants, and the court rendered a single judgment overruling motions for new trials made by each of the defendants, after having first passed an order consolidating such motions, this court ruled that such judgment was in effect the equivalent of two separate judgments overruling respectively the two motions; that while in such case both of the defendants undoubt
Dismissed.