The motions to dismiss the action explicitly limit their grounds to one proposition, to-wit: that the fact that two of the six judges of this court dissented in
Reville
v.
Sullivan,
93
Ga. App.
23 (
In order for the insurance company
to be
able to raise the question sought to be raised in the motions to dismiss, the record and decision in the case of
Reville
v.
Sullivan
must have been pleaded by the plaintiff in the trial court so that the alleged defects in the petition would appear on the face of the petition, or the record and decision in said case should have been judicially noticed by the trial court and should be noticed by this court which would be equivalent to the defects’ appearing on the face of the petition. The record and decision in said case were not pleaded by the plaintiff in the trial court in this case so the case must turn on the question of judicial notice. The oldest cases on this question require the ruling that neither the trial court nor this court can judicially know the record and decision in another case even in the same court.
Salter
v.
Heys,
207
Ga.
591 (3) (
It follows that since the record and decision in the case above referred to were not pleaded and could not be judicially noticed under the circumstances, the question sought to be raised by the *363 insurance company by motions to dismiss could not be so raised, and since the motions were confined to this single question, the court did not err in denying the motion to dismiss as to each of the two counts of the petition. :
Judgment affirmed.
