1. (a) A general assignment of error in the bill of exceptions to the judgment overruling a motion for a new trial is sufficient.
Huxford v. Southern Pine Co. of Ga.,
(b) “Where a bill of exceptions which can be identified as excepting to a specific judgment shall be served upon counsel of record in the case, such service shall be held to- bind all parties whom said counsel represented in the trial court.” Code § 6-912. Where two or more attorneys appear as attorneys of record in the case, both signing the answer of the defendant, appearing as counsel of record in the first appeal and also upon the second trial of the case, the bill of exceptions will not be dismissed because service thereof was acknowledged by one of the counsel of record who was not as a matter of fact leading counsel, although he was associated in the case.
The motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions is denied.
2. “A decision rendered upon a state of facts appearing in the record, in which the legal effect of those facts is declared, is, in all subsequent proceedings in the case, a final adjudication of the rights of the parties, from which the court cannot depart, nor the parties relieve themselves, so long as the facts themselves appear without material qualification.”
Blackwell v. Southland Butane Gas Co.,
3. On the first trial of this cause of action,
Moorman v. Williams,
Since under our decision in Moorman, supra, the evidence demands the verdict rendered, the eight special grounds of the motion for new trial complaining'only of alleged inaccuracies in the charge will not be considered.
The trial court did not err in overruling the motion for new trial. Judgment affirmed.
