— This case is before us on appeal from the district court of Nez Perce county. Plaintiff filed her complaint to which an answer was filed by some of the defendants. Afterward plaintiff had permission to amend her complaint, which was done, and thereafter demurrers were filed by all of the defendants. The only one appearing
A motion was submitted to this court to dismiss this appeal for the following reasons: “That the notice of appeal notifies that there will be more than one appeal taken and that the bond on appeal is conditioned for the payment of a single $300 under the statutory penalties and obligations, and that said bond is uncertain and ambiguous in that it does not state from or to which appeal it is conditioned.” The notice follows: “Please take notice that the above-named plaintiff appeals to the supreme court of the state of Idaho, from that certain decision and order sustaining defendant’s demurrers to plaintiff’s amended complaint and from the judgment of dismissal of the said district court and the whole thereof, entered herein on the twenty-seventh day of July, 1905, in favor of said defendants and against said plaintiff.”
The court has repeatedly held that where the notice provided for two appeals, such as an appeal from the judgment and an order overruling a motion for a new trial, or any other appealable order, and but one bond was given in the statutory
Counsel for appellant urges that the court on its own motion “arrogated to itself the statutory privilege of holding against plaintiff on the grounds of want of jurisdiction, which seldom is and never should be invoked upon the court ’is own motion, unless unquestioned and conclusive.”* We cannot give our assent to this contention. If the court is satisfied from former decisions of this court or from any well-founded reason that it is without jurisdiction to hear and decide the questions presented by the pleadings, it becomes the duty of the court to refuse to try the ease, and thus possibly save large expense to all parties to the litigation. This rule has its foundation in equity, and it is upon the assumption that it is better to have the issues settled by the appellate court before the expense of a trial, than to take the entire case up after trial, and after large expenditures have been incurred. With this view of the ease as it is presented to us, the only question we will examine and determine is, whether the court had jurisdiction to try the issues as presented by the pleading — that is, the complaint and demurrers, and whether the demurrers were properly sustained. If the court was without jurisdiction, then it was not only its right but duty .to so declare and refuse to try the case. It will be. observed, however, that the court did not arbitrarily refuse to entertain jurisdiction. It is shown by the order sustaining: the demurrers, to wit, “The court having heard the arguments pro and con thereon, and having asked for arguments on the point of jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine this case, and the said point having been argued and