Gold Kist, Inc. sued Stokes for damages for failure to deliver certain lots of soy beans in accordance with contract provisions. Stokes defended on the ground that, after the time for delivery had passed, and also after a delivery had been refused, the beans which he could otherwise have delivered had been damaged by fire and their subsequent tender had been refused on this ground, which, under contract provisions, limited his liability. The jury returned a verdict for $3,149.10 and judgment was entered on November 4,1974. A motion for new trial was filed on November 1, with no rule nisi attached and no hearing date obtained or sought. A motion to dismiss the motion for new trial was granted on December 12, 1974, and a notice of appeal was filed on December 30. Held:
1. "Where a motion for new trial is defective in that no rule nisi signed by the trial judge is sought or obtained, setting the same for hearing and accompanied by service on the opposite party, and there is no amendment and no waiver, a motion to dismiss should be sustained.” McDougall v. Stoner, 134 Ga. App. 342 (214 SE2d 384).
2. (a) The dismissal of the motion for new trial is here enumerated as error. The ruling was obviously correct. This does not, however, mean that this court should dismiss the appeal, as the appellee urges us to do. We have jurisdiction of the case under Code Ann. § 6-803, which provides that a notice of appeal shall be filed within 30 days from the entry of the order granting, overruling, or otherwise finally disposing of the motion for new trial.
(b) While we deny the motion to dismiss the appeal in this court, the effect of our affirmance of the trial court’s action in disposing of the motion for new trial by dismissal is to establish as the law of the case those grounds of the motion for new trial which stand dismissed. As was held in Ruff v. State, 132 Ga. App. 568 (208 SE2d 581): "The ruling [of dismissal] on the motion for new trial absolutely decides adversely to movant each and every ground of said motion for new trial, leaving the judgment on the verdict as the law of the case... None of the grounds of the motion for new trial can be considered, the law of the case being *383established thereon.” This follows Munn v. Kelliam, 228 Ga. 395 (185 SE2d 766) where it was held: "The court’s dismissal of the motion for new trial on the grounds stated conclusively shows an abandonment of the motion for a new trial which completely obliterates the motion for a new trial and all of its grounds and an abandonment of the motion for a new trial leaves the judgment on the verdict as the law of the case and the grounds of the motion, not ruled on, may not be enumerated as error on appeal.” The first three enumerations of error, complaining of alleged errors in the charge and of the inadequacy of the verdict on the evidence offered, duplicate the general and special grounds of the dismissed motion for new trial and accordingly may not be considered by this court.
Argued April 30, 1975 Decided June 2, 1975 Rehearing denied July 10, 1975Nothing to the contrary was intended to be held in Checker Cab Co. v. Fedor, 134 Ga. App. 28 (213 SE2d 485). This case, like Slay v. Brady, 126 Ga. App. 249 (190 SE2d 445) has to do with the dismissal of the appeal. It was held in the Checker Cab case that even though the appellant failed to enumerate as error the dismissal of the motion for new trial this court had jurisdiction of the appeal under our Rule 14 (e) which provides that the enumeration of errors shall be deemed to include any judgments necessary for a consideration of the errors enumerated. In Checker Cab there had been no enumeration of error on the judgment dismissing the motion for new trial, and this court refused to dismiss the appeal on this ground but considered it as though the dismissal judgment had in fact been enumerated as error, since it was contained in the record. However, in Checker Cab the enumerations of error were entirely different from the grounds of the motion for new trial and no law of the case question arose. This is the distinction between Checker Cab on the one hand and the Ruff and Munn cases on the other. The present case falls in the latter category so far as the first three enumerations of error are concerned. The remaining two are without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
Evans, J., concurs. Stolz, J., concurs in the judgment only. Alston, Miller & Gaines, R. H. Reeves, III, James S. Stokes, IV, for appellant. Harry H. Hunter, for appellee.