The defendant in error moved to dismiss the bill of exceptions on the ground that the evidence was not embodied in it, and though it referred to the evidence as embodied in the record, it nowhere appeared, either in the bill of exceptions or in the transcript of the record, that the brief of the evidence was approved by the court. The act of 1870, (see Code, section 4253,) enacts that the brief of the evidence, filed and approved according to law, is made part of the record, and if referred to in the bill of exceptions, need not be actually set out in the bill of exceptions, which before that act liad to be done. It will be seen that the act requires the brief to be approved as well as filed. The filing is a mere act of the clerk, the approval is the act of the court. Certainly the court is entitled to say what evidence was before it when it ruled in the case. In this ease the court has not been heard, so far as the bill of exceptions or record discloses to us, and under the authority of Massey vs. Pitts, Cook & Company, 48 Georgia Reports, 124, as well as the letter of the act of 1870, and its spirit and sense, we feel constrained, reluctantly always, to dismiss the bill of exceptions. While we have not *585examined the grounds of error with as much particularity and care as we should have done if the motion to dismiss liad not controlled the case, yet, from a cursory view of the questions made, we would be inclined to affirm the judgment on the merits, and therefore apply the well settled rule of the court to dismiss such a bill of exceptions with less reluctance. Bill of exceptions dismissed.