delivered the opinion of the Court.
October 18, 1926, J. V. & R. T. Burkes agreed with the Investment Company, owner of certain land in Natchez, Mississippi, to construct a hotel thereon. The contract contains the following clauses—
“Article 30. Guaranty Bond. — The Owner shall have the right, prior to the signing of the contract, to require the Contractor to furnish bond covering the faithful performance of the Contract and the payment of all obligations arising thereunder, in such form as the Owner may prescribe with such sureties as he may approve. If such bond is required by instructions given previous to the. submission of bids, the premium shall be paid .by the Contractor; if subsequent thereto it shall be paid by the Owner
*175 “ Obligations of Bondsmen. — The Contractor’s bondsmen shall obligate themselves to all the terms and covenants of these specifications, and of the contracts covering the work' executed hereunder, and the Owner and the Architect reserve the right to make all desired changes, alterations, and additions, under the conditions and in the manner hereinbefore described, without in any measure affecting the liability of the bondsmen or releasing them from any of their obligations hereunder.”
October 20, 1926, the Burkes gaye a bond for $316,-822.00, payable to the Investment Company, with appellant as surety. Among other things this provides—
“ Whereas, the Principal and the Obligee have entered into a certain written contract (hereinafter called the contract) dated October 18th, 1926, To construct ‘ Eola Hotel ’ building as per plans and specifications #640 as prepared by Weiss & Dreyfus, Architects, New Orleans, La., a copy of which is or may be attached hereto, and is hereby referred to and made a part hereof. Now, therefore,.the condition of this obligation is such that if the principal shall indemnify the obligee against loss or damage directly caused by the failure, of the principal faithfully to perform the contract, then this obligation shall be null and void; otherwise it shall remain in force; provided, however, this bond is executed by the surety, upon the following express conditions, which shall be precedent to the right of recovery hereunder. . . .
“11. No right of action shall accrue upon or by reason hereof, to or for the use or benefit of any one other than the obligee named herein; and the obligation of the surety is and shall be construed strictly as one of surety-ship only.”
Payments to the contractors were made as required by the building contract but they failed to satisfy claims for material furnished by Bunn Electric Company and others. The latter notified the Investment Company. There *176 upon, it instituted a proceeding in the Chancery Court, Adams County, Mississippi, against the,contractors, the appellant Hartford Accident &. Indemnity Company, and many unpaid materialmen. The bill prayed for a decree declaring the indemnity bond to be one for faithful-performance of the building contract and subject to the rights and liabilities provided by § 3, * c. 128, Mississippi Laws of 1918 (§ 2598, Hemingway’s Miss. Code 1927); also for judgments in favor of those who had -furnished materials, etc.
The materialmen answered. Also by cross bill and interventions they set up their claims and asked for judgments against the contractors and appellant here, surety upon the bond. The Chancellor gave judgments in favor of • the cross-complainants as prayed. The Indemnity Company appealed. The Supreme Court approved, upon the view that § 3, c. 128, Mississippi Laws 1918, applied and controlled the obligation of the bond. [
Upon petition of the Hartford Accident & 'Indemnity' Company alone, the Chief Justice of Mississippi allowed an appeal to this Court', July 25, 1931. The Aetna Casualty & Surety Company did not join-in the appeal; there was no summons and severance nor any notice equivalent thereto.
The .assignment of errors challenges the validity, under the Federal Constitution, of § 3, c. 128, Mississippi Laws, above cited, as construed and applied.
December 4, 1931, the appellees entered a motion here, to dismiss the appeal. They maintain that the judgments in the Mississippi- Supreme Court against appellant and Aetna; Casualty & Surety Company were joint; the latter company did not join in the appeal; there was no summons and severance.; consequently this Court is without jurisdiction.
December 23, 1931, appellant and the Aetna Company asked that the latter be made party to the appeal and for proper amendments to that end.
The motion to amend must be overruled. The motion to dismiss is sustained.
The challenged judgment became final June 15, 1931, more than six months before the Aetna Company applied here for permission to become a party to the pending appeal. If this application .and the accompanying motion to amend were granted, the practical effect would be to permit an appeal by a party to a judgment after the prescribed time had expired.
The statute (Act of Feb. 13, 1925, c. 229, § 8, 43 Stat. 940; U. S. C. A. Title 28, § 350) provides — “ No writ of error, appeal, or writ of certiorari, intended to bring any judgment or decree before the Supreme Court for re
*178
view shall be allowed or entertained unless application therefor be duly made within three months after the entry of such judgment or decree, . . .” Passage of the three months’ period extinguished the right to grant an appeal.
Rust Land Co.
v.
Jackson,
The judgment is joint in form and no reason appears why either or both of the parties defendant therein might not have appealed’ to this Court and submitted claims of error for our determination. ’ In matters of this kind we may not disregard the face of the record and treat, the judgment as something other than it appears to be. So to do probably would lead to much confusion and uncertainty. „
Haseltine
v.
Central
Bank,
Norfolk Turnpike Co.
v.
Virginia,
See
Estis
v.
Trabue,
Masterson v. Herndon, 10 Wall, 416, 417, held — “ It is the established doctrine of this court that in cases at law, where the judgment is joint, all the parties against whom it is rendered must join in- the writ of error; and in chancery cases, all the parties against whom a joint decree is rendered must join in the appeal, or they will be dismissed. There are two reasons for this: 1. That the successful party may be at liberty to proceed in the enforcement of his judgment or decree against the parties who do not desire to have it reviewed. 2. That the appellate tribunal shall not be required to decide a second c third time the same question on the same record. . . . One of the' effects of this judgment of severance was to bar the party who refused, to proceed, from prosecuting the same right in another action,-.as the defendant could not be harassed by two separate actions on a joint obligation, or on account of the same cause of action, it being joint in its nature.”
In
Estis
v.
Trabue,
Mason
v.
United States,
Hardee
v.
Wilson,
The New York,
Considering former opinions of this Court and the long established practice, we cannot accept as applicable to appeals here the doctrine approved in The New York. It is out of harmony with Estis v. Trabue, supra, and other cases cited above. We cannot undertake to explore the record to ascertain what issues were relied upon in courts below. So to do would lead to uncertainty and unfortunate confusion. We must accept the terms of the judgment as entered. As pointed out above, this is the approved practice when it becomes necessary to determine whether a judgment is final or to what court a writ of error should run. Like reasons apply and control here.
The appeal must be dismissed.
Dismissed.
Notes
Chapter 128, Mississippi Laws of 1918. “ Sec. 3. That when any contractor or subcontractor entering intp a formal contract with any person, firm or corporation, for the construction of any building or work or the doing of any repairs, shall enter- into a bond with such person, firm or corporation guaranteeing the faithful performance of.such contract and containing such provisions and' penalties as the parties thereto may insert therein, such bond shall also be subject to the additional obligations that such contractor or subcontractor, shall promptly make payments to all persons furnishing labor or material under said contract; and in the event such bond does not contain any such provisions for the payment of the claims of persons furnishing labor or material under said contract, such bond shall nevertheless inure to the benefit of such person furnishing labor or material under said contract, the same as if such stipulation had been incorporated in said bond; ...”
