106 Ga. 850 | Ga. | 1899
Betsy Clark brought against Jones an action of complaint for land. At the close of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff, Jones moved for a nonsuit, which was refused by the court. Jones excepted. Jones then offered a deed which purported to have been made by the plaintiff and under which he claimed. Plaintiff filed an affidavit that the deed was a forgery; whereupon an issue was made up and tried by jury. The verdict was that the deed was a forgery. Jones moved for a new trial of this collateral issue; the motion was overruled, and he excepted. He now brings his bill of exceptions to this court, seeking a reversal of these rulings. When the case was called here, counsel for the defendant in error moved to dismiss the writ of error, because the case was prematurely brought to this court, the main case not having been tried in the court below but still pending there. It seems that when the issue of forgery was decided against the defendant by the jury, he did not submit to a verdict in the original case of complaint for land, but this latter case was postponed or continued, and is still pending in the court below. Section 5526 of the Civil Code provides, in substance, that no cause shall be brought to
It is argued, however, that the defendant in the court below had the right,-under section 5474 of the Civil Code, to move for a new trial on this collateral issue, and that the judge had power to grant or refuse it, and that, inasmuch as he did refuse, a bill of exceptions lies to that refusal before a final determination of the main case. We think that this can not be done under the section of the code just cited, when taken in connection with that first set out. While the defendant had a right to move for a new trial upon the collateral issue and the
It is further claimed that this writ of error should not be-dismissed, for the reason that there is an exception with which this court can deal, namely, that the court erred in refusing to-grant a nonsuit at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence.. Having shown. that this court can not review the refusal to-grant a new trial upon the collateral issue, as brought up in this bill of exceptions, the only question remaining is as to-whether-it can entertain a writ of error where the sole error complained of. in the bill of exceptions is that the court erred
Writ of error dismissed.