The defendant was convicted, in 1947, of the murder of Leroy Hill. Her conviction was affirmed by this
*841
court in 1948 in
Gossett
v.
State,
203
Ga.
692 (
The denial of a motion to dismiss an extraordinary motion for new trial in a criminal case cannot be reviewed by this court, since “A writ of error does not lie to this court, in a criminal case, at the instance of the State.”
State
v.
Jones,
7
Ga.
422. As to who may appeal to this, court, it is provided in Code (Ann.) § 6-901: “Either party in any civil cause, and the defendant in any criminal proceeding, in the superior or city courts, may except to- any sentence, judgment, or decision, or decree of such court, or of the judge thereof in any matter heard at chambers.” The historical basis for this provision is dealt with in
State
v.
Jones,
supra, where a writ of error, sued out to review a decision ordering an indictment quashed against the defendant, was dismissed, and where it is said at page 426: “In criminal causes, the State, through her agents, is the judge who tries the accused. In civil cases, she stands aside and leaves the parties to litigate upon equal terms before a tribunal independent of both. Thus unequally do the State and the defendant enter upon an issue, the result of which may involve the liberty or life of the one, and no sensible consequence to the other. Yiewed in this light, it is a concession in behalf of the defendant, both humane and reasonable, that the State should not review her own errors — that she should decide but once.” In the absence of express statutory provision, the State cannot sue out a writ of error upon a judgment in favor of the defendant in a criminal case.
State
v.
B’Gos,
175
Ga.
627 (
Sustained.
