The bill of exceptions here questions the validity of the trial court’s order refusing to grant a motion to vacate a joint verdict and judgment and order a new trial for some defendants when the other codefendants in the same case were to be the recipients- of these benefits by a judgment of the Court of Appeals.
This appeal is brought by one group of codefendants in a suit who, on a previous appeal brought separately from the other codefendants, were denied a new trial.
Smith v. Barnett,
The defendant in error urges that antecedent rulings unexcepted to are now the law of the case referring, of course, to the affirmance in Smith of the trial judge’s refusal to grant a new trial. This principle, however, has no relevancy with respect to the one point now before us. The exception here is to the failure of the trial court, on motion properly presented, tó set aside the joint verdict and judgment against all of the codefendants and to order a new trial as to all of them. The motion was filed with the trial court after the remittiturs in each case had revested jurisdiction in that court. The motion recounts that a new trial in effect was ordered by the Court of Appeals in Thomas which entails a setting aside of the verdict and judgment as to some of the codefendants in the joint verdict and judgment; and since the verdict and judgment are indivisible as to all of the codefendants and must stand or fall in toto as to all, the remaining defendants are entitled to the same relief. This ruling denying the motion presents the only question before us. There is no law of the case as to it. Proper exceptions have been brought protesting its legality.
As Judge Jordan stated in
Smith v. Barnett,
Judgment reversed.
