9 S.E.2d 251 | Ga. | 1940
1. Refusal in writing by a judge of the superior court to grant a rule nisi on an extraordinary motion for new trial based on newly discovered evidence, because of absence of the required supporting affidavits, is not necessarily such a final disposition of the motion that a further presentation of it in proper form would constitute a second extraordinary motion for new trial, the making or allowing of which is prohibited by statute.
2. Where at the hearing of the motion, which the judge sustained, the solicitor-general contended that the judge had no authority to entertain it, because it was the second such motion, the making or allowing of which is prohibited by statute, and the judge overruled this contention that the judgment concluded the State on this question, and the Board of Penal Corrections could not thereafter successfully maintain against the sheriff, who was holding the defendant pending his retrial, a petition for the writ of habeas corpus for the purpose of assigning the defendant to a penal institution for the service of his sentence, on the ground that the judge's order granting a new trial was void, the petition being based on the same point made by the solicitor-general at the hearing.
1. The plaintiff contends, that, as the judge denied a new trial by refusing to grant a rule nisi on the extraordinary motion, the defendant had no right, and the judge had no authority thereafter to entertain and sustain another such motion. It is at least doubtful whether an extraordinary motion for new trial can be considered to have been "made or allowed" within the meaning of the statute, unless a rule nisi was granted thereon and a hearing held. See Cox v. State,
2. There is an additional reason why the judgment refusing a writ of habeas corpus should be affirmed. On the hearing of the motion the solicitor-general insisted, on the same ground as set out in the petition for habeas corpus, and now insisted on by the plaintiff, that the judge had no authority to sustain the motion. In the response to the petition for habeas corpus it is alleged that Judge Grice entertained the view that the extraordinary motion for new trial (which he at the conclusion of the hearing granted) was the only such motion that he had ever entertained and allowed, and that he accordingly overruled the contention made by the solicitor-general. Judge Grice verifies these allegations by an affidavit. A judgment rendered in litigation between the same parties is conclusive in a subsequent suit between them, though based on a different cause of action, as to issues actually made and determined in the former litigation.Worth v. Carmichael,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.