93 N.C. 112 | N.C. | 1885
This action is brought upon a claim of title to an undivided moiety of the lands in the complaint mentioned, with a demand for a large sum as damages for the withholding of possession by the defendants. The plaintiffs' title is controverted by the defendants., who *118 allege themselves to be owners in fee of the property. At Spring Term, 1885, of the Superior Court of Granville, an amended complaint was filed, in which is a supplemental demand for and account of the rents and profits, followed by an entry upon the record in these terms:
"And thereupon an issue is made up by and under the direction of the court, to be submitted to the jury, it being agreed between the parties that the question as to the amount of damages an mesne profits to which the plaintiffs would be entitled. if the issue should be found in their favor, should be reserved and tried thereafter, which said issue is as follows, to wit;
"Are the plaintiffs the owners and entitled to the possession of one undivided half of the land in the amended complaint mentioned and described?"
To this inquiry the jury, under the instructions of the court, returned an affirmative response, and , after a motion for a new trial made and denied, it was adjudged "that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants one undivided half of the tract of land described by metes and bounds in plaintiffs' amended complaint, and that a writ of possession issue," etc., with this concluding sentence, " It is further ordered by the court that the amount of damages and mesne profits, to which the plaintiffs are entitled be submitted to a jury for trial at the next term of (114) this court, unless the parties hereto shall otherwise agree,"
In this status of the case, with one material issue passed upon by the jury, and the other reserved for trial at the next term, and so far as the record shows, with no adjustment of the claim for damages and profits between the parties, the appeal is taken to this Court for a review of the rulings of the Court upon the one issue tried. We had supposes the rule too well settled and understood by the profession form repeated adjudications extending as far back as January Term, 1881, when Hines v.Hines,
The general principle is that when a trial is entered upon it should embrace and determine the whole subject matter in controversy, so that a final judgment may be entered, any errors committed in its progress being open to revision and correction in one appeal, while the Court could not tolerate a succession of appeals upon separate and fragmentary parts. The ruling has been frequently since recognized and acted on. We refer to but a few of them, the most recent: Comrs. v. Satchwell,
The practice thus established, upon its intrinsic merits and to avoid useless and prolonged litigation, must be upheld.
The appeal is dismissed, and the parties left to proceed with (115) the unfinished cause in the Superior Court as if uninterrupted by an attempted appeal. Let this be certified.
Dismissed.
Cited: Welch v. Kinsland, post, 282; Emry v. Hardee,