Baldwin v. Lowe
This text of 59 S.E. 772 (Baldwin v. Lowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
1. Save as to cases specially provided for by law (such as exception to the grant or refusal of an injunction, or the appointment of or refusal to appoint a receiver), no case can be brought to this court by bill of exceptions, so long as the same is pending in the court below, unless the decision complained of would have been a final disposition of the case, had it been rendered as the excepting party claims that it should have been. Civil Code, §5526.
2. Striking an imperfect plea to the jurisdiction filed by the sole defendant, and rejecting an amendment thereto, is not a ñnal judgment, and does not dispose of the case; nor would it have done so had the amendment, been allowed and the motion to strike been overruled.
3. Where exception was taken to such a ruling, and it appears from the bill of exceptions that, after the plea to the jurisdiction had been stricken, the case was continued in order to allow the decision to be brought to this court for review, this was an interlocutory ruling, leaving the ease still pending; and the writ of error will be dismissed.
L Parties can not confer jurisdiction on this court by agreement to review such an interlocutory ruling, while the case remains pending in the trial court. Nor does it matter that the bill of exceptions recites that it was “conceded” by counsel that, under the facts of the ease, if the plea to the jurisdiction should be allowed, it would be a final disposition of the case. Such would not have been the legal result.
Writ of error dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
59 S.E. 772, 129 Ga. 711, 1907 Ga. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-lowe-ga-1907.