57 Miss. 367 | Miss. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
This writ of error is prosecuted to revise the judgment of the Circuit Court, rendered in a proceeding of forcible entry and unlawful detainer. It is insisted on behalf of the defendant in error, that, as the statute authorizing such proceedings provides for an appeal to the Circuit Court, but fails to provide specially for an appeal or writ of error to revise the action of that court, its judgment is final, and this writ of error must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. We do not consider this position well founded. Writs of error or appeals may be prosecuted from any final judgment of a Circuit or Chancery Court, by virtue of Code 1871, §§ 409, 410, 411, except only in cases where by statute a special provision is made to the contrary. When a judgment has been rendered in the Circuit Court, it is the judgment of that court, whether it be rendered in a cause originating there, or brought up by appeal. In some instances the appellate jui’isdiction of the court has been denied to revise judgments rendered in the Circuit Court in causes which were appellate in that court; but this denial has been predicated upon some provision in the statute, which made the judgment of the Circuit Court final. Dismukes v. Stokes, 41 Miss. 430; Mississippi Central Railroad Co. v. Kennedy, 41 Miss. 551.
But if there is no provision restricting or denying the right of appeal, or the right to a writ of error, as to any particular judgment rendered in the court, the right has uniformly been held to exist. In New Orleans Railroad Co. v. Hemphill, 35 Miss. 17, 20, it was denied by counsel that a writ of error lay to revise the judgment of the Circuit Court, rendered on an appeal from the proceedings of a jury of inquest to assess damages for the appropriation of land to the use of a railroad company. But the court said: “ The act does not declare in terms that the judgment in these cases, either affirming or setting aside the inquest, shall, be final. It is, in fact, perfectly silent on the subject. Judgments of the Circuit Courts, in such cases, are left to stand precisely on the same footing with all other judgments of those courts.” This case is an authority exactly in point, as the act on the subject of unlawful and forcible entry and unlawful detainer proceedings is silent as to
It is urged, however, on behalf of the plaintiff in error that the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction, and that the appeal to that court should be dismissed. He insists that the judgment rendered by the justices of the peace, being a dismissal of the complaint for want of prosecution before them, was not a final judgment; that the plaintiff was not concluded by it, and had a right to institute his suit anew, and that therefore no appeal to the Circuit Court will lie. It is true that the judgment of dismissal for want of prosecution does not finally determine the rights of the parties litigant, but it is a final determination of that suit. Under statutes allowing appeals only after final judgment, the decisions have been uniform, so far as our researches extend, that the judgment is to be understood as final if it puts an end to the particular suit in which it is rendered, whether it finally determines the rights of the parties or not. Freeman on Judgments, §§ 12, 16, and authorities cited.
On the merits of the case, a new trial must be granted. The complainant asked for the recovery of the SE| of section 21, alleged to have been set apart to the plaintiff as dower. On the trial, the defendant offered to show that the land of which he took possession was in section 28. This offer was refused by the court, and, as we think, wrongfully. The defendant was not called upon to make any defence, except as to land in section 21, and the evidence offered was pertinent to his defence. We infer from the evidence that the commissioners, who set off the dower of the plaintiff, made the allotment by metes and bounds, and that they gave her land mentioned in their report as being in sections 21 and 22; but that in marking the boundaries they included land in section 28, now claimed by the defendant, supposing it, however, to lie in section 21. If their report shows, by the metes and bounds mentioned in it, that land in section 28 was set apart as part of her dower, she would not be deprived of the right to claim to the line marked by the commissioners, because they made a mistake in supposing it to be the line between
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.