after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
A decree to be final for the purposes of appeal must leave, the case in such a condition that if there be an affirmance in this court, the court below will have nothing to do but execute the decree it has already entered.
Dainese
v.
Kendall,
So far as appears the case stands at issue below as to the defendants other than Stelling, and the whole cause. has not been finally determined in the Circuit Court. It cannot be divided so as to bring up successively distinct parts of it, and the decree is not a final decree.
It may be that if the order of the Circuit Court were affirmed appellant would abandon further effort against the other defendants, while it is clear enough that if the order were, reversed the case would be proceeded in against them all; but it is useless to speculate on the subject, as this appeal manifestly falls within the general rule.
In
Mendenhall
v.
Hall,
In
Hill
v.
Chicago & Evanston
Railroad,
This decree cannot, ‘however, be brought within the exception created by tbe peculiar circumstances of that case.
As the order upon the demurrer did. not dispose of the whole case, the decree is not final, and we cannot' entertain jurisdiction. Appeal dismissed.
