This appeal originates from a criminal indictment obtained by the State against two dairies and an individual employee of each dairy. The indictment charged the defendants with conspiracy in restraint of trade in the sale of milk to certain public school districts and detailed specific acts of bid rigging involving the defendants in the sale of milk to the school boards. On the day the trial of the case was scheduled to begin, the trial court heard argument on the defendants’ motion in limine to exclude the testimony of two óf the State’s witnesses. The witnesses were two former employees of one of the defendant dairies whose testimony allegedly would implicate themselves, and therefore implicate their employer, on the conspiracy charge. The basis for the motion in limine was that the State had previously dismissed the two witnesses with prejudice as defendants *486 in a federal civil antitrust action predicated on the same facts; that the dismissal acted as an adjudication on the merits that the witnesses did not commit the acts alleged in the federal action; that the acts alleged against the witnesses in the federal action were the same acts alleged in the state criminal action as a basis of criminal liability against the dairies; and that the State’s voluntary dismissal of the witnesses with prejudice from the federal action operates as a bar, under res judicata and collateral estoppel, to the introduction of any evidence which could implicate the two witnesses in the illegal conspiracy. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion in limine and excluded any evidence which may implicate the two witnesses in the conspiracy. The court ruled that such evidence could not be introduced against any of the state criminal defendants. After the trial court granted the motion in limine, the State indicated that it was unable to present its case without the excluded evidence and requested the court to treat the motion as a motion to quash the indictment so that it could appeal the order. Over the objection of the defendants, the court ruled that it would consider the motion as both a motion in limine and a motion to quash and then granted the motion to quash. The State then appealed the trial court’s order to this court, yet dismissed its appeal as to all defendants except Land-O-Sun Dairies, Inc. (“appellee”).
We first entertain appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we agree with appellee that the State has no authority to bring this appeal; that we have no jurisdiction over this appeal; and that this appeal must be dismissed. The State’s right of appeal in a criminal case is regulated by OCGA § 5-7-1. In its brief, the State argues that it has the right to appeal the trial court’s order pursuant to OCGA § 5-7-1 (3), which allows the State to appeal from an order sustaining a plea in bar if jeopardy has not attached. The State contends that appellee’s motion in limine was in substance a plea in bar, since it effectively prevented the prosecution of their case. We disagree. “ ‘(A) plea in bar is one “which goes to
bar
the . . . state’s action; that is, to defeat it absolutely and entirely.” ’ [Cit.]”
Parrish v. State,
Appeal dismissed.
