We have examined the petition for certiorari and are of the opinion the writ be, and it is hereby, denied. We wish to say that the judgment entered in the lower court in the case of State v. Bob Hardeman was sufficient to support an appeal. A consideration of such judgments will be found in Talbert v. State,
"There is an omission in the minute entry of the judgment of a formal adjudication of the defendant's guilt upon the verdict rendered. The minute entry, however, shows a judgment of sentence by the court in accordance with the verdict. In Ex parte Roberson,
Had the judgment in question been void and insufficient to support an appeal, the Attorney General, in failing, on submission of the cause and in his argument in first instance, to challenge the sufficiency of such judgment, would not be estopped to make the insistence on rehearing that the judgment was void. The lack of jurisdiction will be considered by the court ex mero motu, or at the instance of the Attorney General, regardless of the former position taken in his argument by that state official as to said judgment. The necessity for an order, judgment, or decree that will support an appeal to this court is jurisdictional and cannot be waived; unless such an order, judgment, or decree appears in the transcript, the appeal will be dismissed, although the parties consent to and insist upon a review of the case by this court. Temple v. Dooley,
The writ of certiorari is denied.
ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD, SOMERVILLE, and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
