86 Mo. App. 374 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
The answers were general denials, except the admission that Neis and Sophia Nelson were husband and wife. On the hearing there was a decree establishing plaintiffs’ right to recover upon their judgment against Neis Nelson, and ad-
That the appeal in this case should have been taken rightfully to the supreme court will appear from a few decisions of that court defining its appellate jurisdiction in cases of this class. The point is stated with much clearness and logical exactness by Marshall, J., in Price v. Blankenship, 144 Mo. l. c. 209. The rule there laid down distinctly differentiates the cases which fall to the supreme court under the language of the Constitution, and those which should go to the courts of appeal. As to the first it is said: “The judgment to be rendered must directly affect the title to real estate.,> As to the second it is said in substance: That neither collateral inquiries as to title, for the settlement of other issues, nor judgments satisfiable by payment of money, “without affecting the title to real estate,” are sufficient to give the supreme court jurisdiction. The essence of this rule is, that to give the supreme court jurisdiction it must appear that the title to real estate is affected by
SEPARATE OPINION BY BIGGS, J.
I can not agree with my associates on the question of jurisdiction in this case. The test established by the supreme court is, that if the judgment of the circuit court can be satisfied by the payment of money, the title to real estate is not involved, and the courts of appeal have jurisdiction. In this case the amount of plaintiff’s judgment was made a charge against the real estate. The title was not thereby directly affected, and could not be, except there should be further proceedings, i. e., a sale of the land under execution. Assuredly this judgment could be satisfied by the payment of money. May v. Trust Company, 138 Mo. 477; Price v. Blankenship, 144 Mo. 203; Rothrock v. Lumber Co., 146 Mo. 57; Cox v. Barker, 150 Mo. 424.