The Atlantic Fruit Distributors sued J. D. Payne on contract, to recover the purchase price of a car of bananas, and the First State Bank of Paris as guarantor of the payment of the price. J. D. Payne answered the suit and filed a cross-bill against the Gulf, Colorado Santa Fe Railway Company, seeking to recover of it damages for alleged negligence respecting transportation of the car of bananas. The charge of the court authorized a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Mr. Payne and the bank, and the jury so found. And the charge of the court authorized a verdict in favor of Mr. Payne against the railway company, and the jury so found. The judgment of the court, though, as it appears in this transcript, does not dispose of the First State Bank of Paris, and the judgment is not in that respect in conformity with the pleadings, charge of the court, and verdict. J. D. Payne and the railway company each appeal.
The question of jurisdiction of this court is directly presented, upon the ground that there is not a sufficient final judgment under the statute to base an appeal upon. The judgment did not dispose of the litigation as to all parties in the suit. And it is thought that this should have been done in order to have a final judgment under the statute. The statute permits only one final judgment to be rendered in any cause. Article 1997, Vernon's Sayles' Statutes. And there is no final judgment in a case against several defendants until the case is finally disposed of as to all. The plaintiff's suit here was, it it is quite certain, upon a contract, and Payne's cross-action was against the railway company on a tort. It is not open to question that the controversies were quite distinct and severable; yet the causes of action were in fact joined in and tried as one cause. It is analogous to several suits consolidated. Mills v. Paul,
The appeal of each appellant must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction to entertain it.
The motion is overruled.