While the case of Clara Bromschwig et al. v. Carthage Marble
White Lime Company, a Corporation,
The defendants, Carthage Marble White Lime Company, a Corporation, George S. Beimdiek, Emil J. Beimdiek and Arthur O. Beimdiek, have filed a motion in this court to dismiss the interveners' appeal. One of the reasons assigned in this motion is that the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to enter a judgment dismissing the interveners' petition on September 3, 1931, and allowing an appeal to this court because the circuit court lost jurisdiction in the case when it allowed an appeal to this court on July 22, 1931, which stood unrevoked.
We believe that the respondents' motion should be sustained for that reason.
The Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis on July 22, 1931, lost jurisdiction of the case pending before it when it granted an appeal in that case to this court. The judgment and order allowing an appeal entered by the appellants on September 3, 1931, were a nullity because the circuit court did not have jurisdiction of the cause of action. At that time, the jurisdiction in that case was in this court. It could not be in both courts at the same time.
In the recent case of Niedringhaus v. Wm. F. Niedringhaus Investment Co., 54 S.W.2d 79, after a very exhaustive review of the authorities, the St. Louis Court of Appeals held that the trial court could not set aside a judgment after an appeal had been allowed to this court, although the judgment and the order granting the appeal were entered at the same term that the trial court undertook to set aside the judgment but failed to set aside the order granting the appeal. The Court of Appeals in its opinion on page 83 said:
"We hold that the circuit court did not have jurisdiction to set aside its judgment rendered at its October Term, 1928, while the *Page 832 order granting an appeal from that judgment stood unrevoked and in force, and that its order attempting so to do was a nullity. The said October Term judgment is therefore the final judgment in the cause."
In the case of State ex rel. Charles B. Williams v. Daues,
We, therefore, believe that this appeal should be dismissed. It is so ordered. All concur.