42 S.E.2d 507 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1947
1. An appeal by the defendant to the Appellate Division of the Civil Court of Fulton County from a final judgment non obstante veredicto for the plaintiff, is not such an appeal as must be accompanied by a brief of the evidence.
2. (a) The court did not err in vacating the judgment non obstante veredicto.
(b) The court erred in ordering a new trial.
The jury returned a verdict for the defendant and judgment was entered thereon. The plaintiff made an oral motion for a new trial which was set for hearing on June 6, 1946. On May 20 the plaintiff filed a motion for judgment "non obstante veredicto" which was set for hearing on May 30, and upon a final hearing of that motion on June 13, 1946, the court granted it and entered judgment for the plaintiff in the amount claimed in the suit. In granting the motion for judgment non obstante veredicto the court did not vacate or set aside or otherwise deal with the verdict and judgment previously rendered in favor of the defendant. The motion for new trial which had been made by the plaintiff was withdrawn. Subsequently, the defendant filed and had certified to the appellate division of the court an appeal upon the ground that the judgment non obstante veredicto was improperly granted, and upon a hearing by the court that judgment was set aside and *123 a new trial was ordered. The exception here is to that ruling and to the failure of the court to pass upon a motion to dismiss the said appeal on the ground that no brief of the evidence was filed with it.
1. Upon the question of the necessity of a brief of the evidence we think the case of McGee v. Knox,
2. Was the judgment non obstante veredicto demanded as a matter of law? The Supreme Court in Buffington v. Carter,
After the action of the appellate division in setting aside the judgment non obstante veredicto, the court was without authority to order a new trial. The verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant to which no exception was taken except in the motion for new trial filed by the plaintiff, which motion was dismissed when the judgment non obstante veredicto was rendered, was in full force and effect when that latter judgment was set aside, and the court erred in the absence of proper exceptions duly filed to *125 the verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, in ordering a new trial.
We therefore hold that the ruling of the appellate division was not erroneous in setting aside the judgment non obstante veredicto, but the court erred in ordering a new trial.
Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed in part. Sutton, C.J., and Felton, J., concur.