Defendant Margie Eucalyptus appeals from the trial court’s entry of an interlocutory decree in partition which ordered the partition and sale of certain real property owned by her and the First National Bank of Carrollton as tenants in common. Eucalyptus contends that the trial court erred in ordering the sale of the property because there was no evidence before the court that the parties would be prejudiced by a partition in kind. The issue is whether this order denying partition in kind is an interlocutory decree in partition which determines the rights of the parties thereby making it appealable under § 512.020, RSMo 1978.
The land in question was purchased in 1966 by Eucalyptus and her then husband along with another couple. In 1970 Eucalyptus and her husband were divorced and each was awarded one-half of the one-half interest they had in the property so that each actually took a one-fourth interest in the total real estate. Sometime after the divorce, Eucalyptus’s ex-husband purchased the one-half interest of the other couple to give him a three-fourths interest in the total property. The Bank took a note and deed of trust from the husband, later foreclosed, and ended up buying the property at the foreclosure sale, so that the Bank held the ex-husband’s three-fourths interest in the whole property. There is no dispute as to the quantum of interest of each party.
The Bank filed a petition for partition in the trial court seeking sale of the land. The Bank pleaded that “the interest of each party, in the ... parcel of land, is that [Bank] is seized with an undivided one-half (½) interest, and [Bank] and [Eucalyptus] are seized with an undivided one-half (V2) interest as Tenants in Common.” In her answer Eucalyptus admitted the Bank’s averments concerning each party’s interest in the land, but denied that sale of the land would not greatly harm the parties, and she asked the court to partition the land in kind. The Bank filed a motion requesting *166 that the court order a sale without the appointment of Commissioners.
A hearing was held on the matter after which the court entered its order for the sale of the land for cash.
Eucalyptus appeals under the provision of § 512.020, RSMo 1978, which allows appeals from “any interlocutory judgments in actions of partition which determine the rights of the parties.” Although respondent Bank does not contest the propriety of the appeal, the first issue before this court must necessarily be whether or not this appeal is permitted under the statute. For this appeal to be properly taken, it must be from an interlocutory order which “determine[d] the rights of the parties.” § 512.-020. The fundamental question is the meaning of the statutory language, “determination of rights.”
In
Young v. Young,
In
Lee’s Summit Building & Loan Association v. Cross,
21. Plaintiff claimed certain matters were not preserved for appellate review because the motion for new trial was filed after the interlocutory judgment and not the final judgment.
22. In the course of the court’s analysis, it stated:
[Partition is different from the ordinary action in that usually the part of the trial, which determines the right of the parties in the property, takes place at a term prior to the term at which the trial of the case is completed and ready for final judgment. Because of this different nature of partition, the Legislature has provided a separate code for this action. [Citations omitted]. In order to afford an opportunity to promptly settle this issue of title, our appeal statute (sec. 1018, R.S. 1929, Mo.St.Ann. § 1018, p. 1286) was amended (Laws 1891, p. 70) to permit appeals “from any interlocutory judgment in actions of partition which determine the rights of the parties.”
In
Brouk v. Nahlik,
In
England v. Poehlman,
In this case we are confronted at the outset with the question whether an appeal lies from an order of partial distribution. If an appeal does lie then such an order must be either the type of interlocutory order which has been made ap-pealable expressly by statute, or it must be a final judgment.
An order by which only part of the proceeds is distributed is an interlocutory order, but we hold it is not the kind of interlocutory order from which an appeal will lie. Section 126 of the new Civil Code carries over the same provision from the old code that an appeal will lie “from any interlocutory judgments in actions of partition which determine the rights of the parties.” § 847.126, Mo.R. S.A. An order of distribution, partial or final, does not of itself determine any such rights; such rights are declared in the judgment of partition entered before the sale is had and necessarily before the proceeds are even realized. The prior determination of the rights of the parties is a necessary precedent to an order of distribution.
The parties in the instant case have cited several decisions in which the propriety of partition by sale rather than in kind is discussed. In two of the cases,
Laird v. Lust,
Gebauer v. Gebauer,
Notwithstanding
Woods, Gebauer
and
Leland Stanford, supra,
the supreme court cases discussed
supra
dictate that the appeal at bar be dismissed. There is no issue regarding the rights of the parties in the property on this appeal. Thus, an interlocutory appeal of the order is improper. This disposition does not leave Eucalyptus without remedy. Although her point of error does not fit within the statutory exception allowing interlocutory appeals, review is available to her upon an entry of a final judgment in the case. The final judgment in a partition suit where a sale of the land is ordered is the order approving the sale and providing for the distribution of the sale proceeds.
England,
The appeal is dismissed as premature.
All concur.
