1. While a compliance with the rule of practice and procedure of 1946 (Ga. L. 1946, pp. 726, 735; Code, Ann. Supp., §§ 6-908.1, 6-909), requiring reasonable notice to the defendant in error or his counsel of the intention to present a bill of exceptions to the trial judge for certification, so that the opposite party may be heard on the question as to whether or not the proposed bill of exceptions is correct and complete, does not dispense with the necessity of serving the defendant in error with a copy of the bill of exceptions after it is certified, as required by Code § 6-911—where there is no acknowledgment or waiver of service
(Mauldin
v.
Mauldin,
203
Ga.
123,
2. While a statutory remedy in derogation of the common law must be strictly pursued
(Banks
v.
Darden,
18
Ga.
318 (3)), and while the public cannot appropriate private property to public use unless it pursues the mode pointed out by the statutes, and if the authorities undertake to appropriate property in any other way equity will restrain the act
(Board of Commissioners of Decatur County
v.
Humphrey,
47
Ga.
565;
City of Blue Ridge
v.
Kiker,
190
Ga.
206,
3. The trial court having properly sustained the defendant’s general demurrer and dismissed the petition, the dissolution of the temporary restraining order previously granted and the refusal of an interlocutory injunction necessarily followed such judgment. In this view of the case, it is unnecessary to pass upon the request of the defendant that this court require its answer sent up as a necessary part of the record.
Judgment affirmed.
