22 So. 2d 874 | Fla. | 1945
Appellant filed a bill in equity against appellees in the Circuit Court of Hardee County early in February, 1945. The defendants promptly filed motion to dismiss on several *171 grounds. On February 23, 1945, the Chancellor made an order in general terms sustaining the motion and dismissing the bill, but allowed the plaintiff fifteen days within which to amend.
On March 16, 1945, plaintiff filed a petition for certiorari in this Court, asking that said order be reviewed and reversed. The defendant made no objection to this form of review under our rule 34. Counsel for the respective parties filed well prepared briefs on the merits. On March 26, 1945, the petition came on to be heard here, and this Court made an order that "said petition be and the same is denied without prejudice." The method of review sought was a proper one, in as much as the order sought to be reviewed by certiorari was not a final order, as it allowed the plaintiff fifteen days within which to amend his bill. Hence this Court, finding no error in the Chancellor's order, denied the petition for certiorari "without prejudice," thereby giving petitioner opportunity to amend his bill in the lower court. But we gather from statements in appellant's brief on this appeal, that counsel for appellant evidently construed our said order to mean that he should have come up by appeal on the theory that the order granting a motion to dismiss a bill with leave to amend was a final decree which could only be reviewed by appeal.
However, that may be, on April 6, 1945, appellant filed in the Court below an amended bill. To this amended bill, which was not substantially different from the original bill, appellees filed an answer, denying certain material allegations of the bill as amended and incorporated in the answer a motion to dismiss the bill on the grounds that, if plaintiff ever had a cause of action, it was barred by the statute of limitations, and also voided by the statute of frauds (
From this order, plaintiff below has taken this appeal, which was entered within ten days after the above order of May 25, 1945, was rendered.
Appellees, within ten days after the transcript was filed in this Court, filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order appealed from was not a final judgment, or order, disposing of the cause, but on the contrary was an interlocutory order and hence reviewable only by certiorari.
In the case of Dudemaine v. Shaw,
We have held in several cases that a motion to dismiss a bill, under the 1931 Chancery Act, for most practical purposes, is the equivalent of a general demurrer. See Pohl Beauty School, Inc., v. City of Miami,
The order attempted to be reviewed by this appeal was not a final order. If the defendant should be unsuccessful on this appeal, he could under the order proceed in the lower *173 court and file an amended bill. A stay was granted to protect him meanwhile. This shows that the order was really interlocutory, rather than final, in its nature, and review thereof could only be had by certiorari under Rule 34.
The case of Dustin v. Latsko,
For the reasons above pointed out, the motion to dismiss this appeal must be, and hereby is, granted.
CHAPMAN, C. J., BUFORD and THOMAS, JJ., concur.