Appellant, Charles Comer Boyett, Jr., filed a complaint for divorce on June 6, 1979, and appellee Harriett Hoffman Boyett filed her answer and cross-complaint on June 22,1979- Appellant filed his answer to the cross-complaint on Sept. 17, 1979- On October 2, 1979, appellant filed a motion for declaratory judgment, asking that the chancery court declare that Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1214 (Repl. 1962), rather than Act 705 of 1979, controls the disposition and division of property, if a divorce should be granted. After a hearing on the motion was held on November 8, 1979, the chancellor held that Act 705 of 1979, not Ark. Stat. Ann. § 34-1214, was controlling. In the declaratory judgment, the court stated that the judgment was final and appealable. We do not agree with the chancellor in respect to the finality of the judgment and dismiss the appeal.
In Johnson Johnson,
* * * For a judgment to be final and appealable, it must in form or effect: terminate the action; operate to divest some right so as to put it beyond the power of the court to place the parties in their former condition after the expiration of the term; dismiss the parties from the court; discharge them from the action; or conclude their rights to the matter in controversy.
The declaratory judgment met none of these requirements. In Johnson, we further said:
* * * An appeal will not lie from an interlocutory order relating only to some question of law or matter of practice in the course of the proceeding, leaving something remaining to be done by the court entering the order or by some court having jurisdiction to entertain the same and proceed further therewith.
See also, Allred v. National Old Line Ins. Co.,
The filing of the motion for a declaratory judgment in the divorce proceeding was nothing more than a request that the trial court make a preliminary declaration of law. The declaratory judgment was nothing more than an interlocutory order.
We are not unaware of the statement in City of Batesville v. Ball,
The declaratory judgment in this case would permit not only piecemeal trial of this action but would also permit piecemeal appeals if we considered it as an appealable order rather than an interlocutory one. Whatever effect the trial court may give the order in further proceedings, it is interlocutory insofar as appealability is concerned. It is true that neither party raised the question of appealability, but this question is raised by the court on its own motion. H.E. McConnell & Son v. Sadie, supra.
We have not overlooked Rule 52 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. Ark. Stat. Ann. Vol. 3A (Repl. 1979). Before a judgment can be final under that rule, it must be final as to one or more of the claims presented in the action. In order for there to be such a judgment, the action of the court must finally determine a claim. A mere declaration of law does not finally determine any claim.
The appeal is dismissed.
