(After stating the foregoing facts.) The trial court evidently based the judgment in this case upon the decision of this court in
Mincey
v.
Crow,
198
Ga.
245 (
Since Code § 27-2706 specifically provides that a suspended sentence shall have the effect of placing the defendant on probation as provided by Code § 27-2705, and this court has held that, under the provisions of § 27-2705, a probation sentence cannot be revoked without notice and an opportunity to be heard, the trial court erred in refusing to discharge the plaintiff in error, who was being held under an order and judgment revoking a suspended sentence without notice or hearing, and in his absence.
The act of 1950 (Ga. L. 1950, p. 352) contains nothing which would change this ruling. It merely provides that sentences in felony cases not punishable by life imprisonment, as well as sentences in misdemeanor cases, may be suspended or probated, and further provides: “Said judge is also empowered with the right and authority to revoke said suspension or probation
when the defendant has violated any of the rules and regulations prescribed by the court.”
To deprive a defendant of his liberty
*599
upon the theory that he has violated any of the rules and regulations prescribed in the sentence without giving him a notice and opportunity to be heard upon the question of whether or not he has violated such rules and regulations, would be to violate one of the fundamentals of our system of jurisprudence that a person shall not be deprived of his liberty without due process of law, which includes notice and an opportunity to be heard. Code (Ann.), §§ 1-805, 1-815, 2-103, 2-104;
Robitzsch
v.
State,
189
Ga.
637 (1-a) (
Judgment reversed.
