Bacon v. Gennett

220 F. 663 | 5th Cir. | 1915

PARDEE, Circuit Judge.

The case shows that the United States of America instituted its condemnation proceedings to condemn 32,000 acres of land lying in Fannin, Gilmer, Murray, and other counties in the northern part of Georgia. An examination of the title to said various tracts of land, including a great many land lots, showed that there were possibly hundreds of claimants in many cases having apparently conflicting interests, whereupon, in aid of said condemnation proceeding, a bill was filed by the United States of America on the *664equity side of the District Court of the Unitéd States for the Northern District of Georgia, making all of these various conflicting claimants parties, and requiring them to come into court and set up by in-terpleader what, if any, claim they had to these respective properties. In response to the notice and service in said bill, Hal H. Bacon filed a claim to six land lots, to wit, Nos. 78, 104, 114, 145, 180, and 213, lying in the Sixth district and First section of Fannin county, Ga. N. W. Gennett also filed claim to said land lots Nos. 78, 104, 114, 145, 180, and 213 in the Sixth district and First section of Fannin county, Ga.

The disputed claims to said respective land lots between said Hal H. Bacón and N. W. Gennett were brought to trial before a jury, resulting in a verdict of the jury finding lot 114 to be the property of Hal H. Bacon, and lots '78, 104, 145, 180, and 213 to be the property of N. W. Gennett. A judgment was entered in accordance with this verdict. Counsel for Hal H. Bacon filed a motion for a new trial, complaining that said verdict and judgment, finding lots 78, 104, 145, 180, and 213 to be the property of N. W. Gennett, were contrary to law and contrary to the evidence. Said motion for new trial was continued until the March term, 1914, of the said court, at which time, to wit, on March 31, 1914, the court rendered a judgment granting said motion for new trial as to lot 104, and overruling said motion for new trial as to lots 180 and 214. Thereupon Bacon petitioned for and was allowed an appeal to this court.

The suit between Bacon and Gennett in the District Court was practically an interpleader covering the whole six lots involved, and the judgment of the District Court fully disposes of only five of them, leaving the title to one lot undetermined. As this court does not have jurisdiction (save in certain exceptional cases, of which this is not pne) to hear appeals from other than final decrees, this appeal is premature and should be dismissed. See Menge v. Warriner, 120 Fed. 816, 57 C. C. A. 432; Rexford v. Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co., 228 U. S. 339, 346, 33 Sup. Ct. 515, 57 L. Ed. 864.

As against dismissal it was argued that the judgment appealed from was final as to five lots in controversy, and that if the appeal should be dismissed that judgment could be executed, and it would then be too late, after a final decree for appellant, to obtain full relief- by appeal; but we consider that the judgment appealed from covering only part of the issues and not disposing of the whole controversy, was not final, even considering the case between the parties as one at law and on the law side of the court. But the case was one in equity, and the verdict of the jury and the judgment thereon — the matter being in the nature of “an issue out of chancery” — were not conclusive, but advisory, having no more effect than a master’s report confirmed, and required a decree in the main case to be made effective. And here we may notice that, if the proceeding before the jury was really a trial at law, a writ of error, instead of an appeal, would have been required to authorize this court to review the same.

The appeal is dismissed.

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