1. The sole question to be decided in the habeas corpus proceeding was whether the confinement of the prisoner was legal at the time of the hearing. See
Johnson v
.
Plunkett,
In
Williamson v. State,
In State v. Maurignos, T. U. P. Charlton 24, it was said that under the habeas corpus Act, 31 Carolus 2, Ch. 2, Sec. 7, which was adopted by our Constitution and laws enacted a person committed for felony could upon demand require indictment and trial at no later than the second term. In
Shirah v. Boyd,
"Referring to the effect of a demand for trial in the case of
Denny v. State,
The General Assembly, further recognizing the need to protect both the accused and the prosecution, enacted Code §50-117: "If the party shall be detained upon a criminal charge, and it shall appear to the court that there is probable cause for his detention, he shall not be discharged for any defect in the. affidavit, warrant, or commitment, until a reasonable time shall have been given to the prosecutor to remedy the defect by a new proceeding.”
Code
§27-1802 (Ga. L. 1971, p. 460) now provides for directed verdicts of not guilty in criminal cases, yet prior to such enactment verdicts of not guilty have been directed in criminal cases, but, inasmuch as the State could not appeal such a ruling, no review of the correctness of such a judgment has ever been possible, (see
State v. Gossett,
In the recent case of
Almand v. Brock,
Judgment reversed.
