“The case stated for an appeal to this Court,” in the words of Ruffin, C. J., “is here taken to be absolutely true as to all matters which occur on the trial, or pur
*719
port to have been acted on in the Court from which the appeal comes.”
State
v.
Reid,
1 Dev. & Bat., 377;
State
v.
Ephraim,
2 Dev.
&
Bat., 162, which are cited and approved in
State
v.
Gooch,
Exceptions to evidence, and all matters other than the charge, must be taken
at the time \_The Code,
§412 (2)], or are waived.
State
v.
Ballard,
The assignment of errors in the instructions to the jury is the act of the appellant. It is his assignment of error, and must appear upon the face of his statement of the case on appeal. It is not a matter which must occur or not occur on the trial, and as to the occurrence or non-occurrence of which the Judge must determine in settling the case.
It is true, counsel, in assigning error to the charge, or for granting or refusing instructions, may recite in his exceptions the charge differently from what the Judge says it was.
*720
In such case the charge as stated by the Judge must govern, as was pointed out in
Walker
v.
Scott,
Per Curiam. Motion allowed.
