The headnotes express the opinion of the majority of the court; and although prepared by the writer, he and Chief Justice Reid dissent from the conclusion there reached. The
*181
material facts are these: To the plaintiff’s action the defendant filed a plea of res adjudicata. By consent this issue was tried first, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant on the plea. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, which after consideration, the judge overruled. In the judgment overruling the motion the judge ordered that the plaintiff’s case be dismissed. The plaintiff brought the case to this court, excepting to the overruling of the motion, but did not except to that part of the judgment dismissing the case. It is the opinion of the majority that this omission to assign error on that part of the judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s case is fatal to the jurisdiction of this court to entertain the writ of error. They are influenced, if not controlled in this, by the rulings in
City of Tallapoosa
v.
Brock,
143
Ga.
599 (
*182 Under our Code, § 6-701, no case may be brought to this court while pending in the court below, unless the judgment complained of would have been final if rendered as claimed by the plaintiff in error. In the City of Tallapoosa and the English cases, the judge found against the plea of res adjudicata. This, of course, left the case pending for trial as if no such plea had been filed. The question presented was whether the judgment complained of would have been final if rendered as claimed by the plaintiff in error. The court seems to have reasoned that if the judgment of the judge had been as claimed by the plaintiff in error, it would have been one simply finding in favor of the plea; and that since it would be necessary, in order to finally terminate the case, that the judge order its dismissal, such judgment would not be a final one. This was in fact the situation presented in the Harris case, supra. The judge found in favor of the plea, but did not provide in the judgment that the ease be dismissed. While it is our view that when a judge sitting by agreement, without the intervention of a jury, enters a judgment finding in favor of a plea of res adjudicata, he should properly also provide therein that the case be dismissed, and that the reasoning of the court in those cases seems to assume that the judge would not, if he found in favor of the plea, complete his judgment, and accordingly that those decisions are erroneous, we do not think that it is necessary to overrule them in order to entertain the present writ of error. Nor do we think the other decisions cited require that the present writ of error be dismissed. In none of those cases was there, as here, a motion for new trial.
In a case' where the defendant simply files an answer denying the material allegations of the petition, and a verdict for the defendant is rendered, if the plaintiff prosecutes a direct bill of exceptions assigning error on some controlling rulings made during the progress of the trial, such as the admission or exclusion of evidence, he must disclose a final judgment on the verdict in favor of the defendant,, and must assign error thereon.
McRae
v.
Boykin,
50
Ga.
App. 866 (
To further illustrate that in a case such as the present the judgment of dismissal is not the final judgment upon which error must, be assigned, we may look to the case of Lyndon v. Georgia Railway & Electric Co., 129 Ga. 354 (supra). That decision lays down the-manner of assignment of error on a final judgment in a bill of exceptions to this court. If error can not be assigned on the judgment of dismissal in the present ease in the way there pointed out,, that is an indication that it is not in this case the final judgment. There is, first, an assignment of error on a final judgment as being-erroneous in itself. Surely a judgment of dismissal which necessarily and properly follows upon a verdict finding in favor of a plea of res adjudieata can not be said to be erroneous in itself. It may he erroneous because the verdict is wrong, or because of some error in the trial; but it is not itself erroneous. As therein illustrated, such a judgment would be one which “did not follow- *185 the verdict; or was rendered in vacation without authority of law.” Then, lastly, can error be assigned thereon as having been controlled by an antecedent erroneous ruling? It is to be remembered in this connection that the judgment overruling the motion for new trial is the error sought to be reached. Such a judgment, .in the ordinary course of things comes long after the judgment of dismissal entered upon the verdict. In other words, the judgment overruling the motion for new trial is the last and, final judgment rendered in the case, and in no proper sense is it an interlocutory .judgment erroneously controlling the dismissal. Thus, while in ihe present case the dismissal of the action and the overruling of ■the motion were contained in one judgment, it is true that the .judgment of dismissal could have been entered at any time after verdict and before or pending the motion; and accordingly it can not be said that the judgment overruling the motion is “one preceding the final judgment,” which “entered into and affected” the dismissal, within the ruling in the Lyndon case.
This case should be distinguished from such cases as
Jones
v. Daniel, 106
Ga.
850 (
*186 It has never been held that this court will not entertain jurisdiction of a writ of error such as this, where, in addition to exceptions to rulings made in limine, error is assigned on the refusal to grant a new trial in a case where the jury by their finding sustained a plea of res judicata; thus delivering a mortal blow to the plaintiff’s case, and there is no reason now so to rule. The ease, in our opinion, should be considered on its merits.
