This is an application for a writ of prohibition to prevent the defendant from proceeding with the trial of the case of Lake v. Sterling Development Co. and others as to certain defendants, upon the ground that the court is precluded from trying the issues between plaintiff and such defendants by reason of a previous adjudication of those rights from which the defendants referred to failed to appeal. The other defendants took an appeal and on such appeal a judgment was rendered reversing the judgment. The question is as to the effect of the judgment of reversal upon the rights of the defendants who failed to take an appeal.
*118 The order of the appellate court, “Judgment reversed,” taken literally, reversed the entire judgment and sent the case back for a new trial. (2 Hayne on New Trial and Appeal, sec. 299, subds. 2 and 4.) This the respondent claims is the effect of the judgment. The suit was one brought by Lake to quiet his title to certain land described in the complaint. The plaintiff’s title was based upon a school land certificate issued to one Brackett and referred to as the Brackett certificate, while the title claimed by all the defendants, who were tenants in common, was derived from a certificate issued to one Phillips, whose heirs and successors are the defendants in the ease. The controversy between the parties was as. to the validity of the respective certificates upon which their respective claims of title depended. The lower court held the Brackett certificate valid and gave judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Upon the appeal this certificate was declared void, from which it followed that the judgment was erroneous not only as to the defendants who appealed but also as to those who failed to appeal. Under these circumstances,- if the appellate court had jurisdiction to render a judgment reversing the case and sending it back for a trial of the issues between all the parties thereto, it is clear that such an order was made and would be in furtherance of justice. The terms of the judgment rendered, unless limited by the nature of the questions presented, or because of a lack of jurisdiction, was a direct decision that the entire judgment be reversed and an implied order for the retrial of the entire case. There is nothing in the nature of the case to justify the conclusion that it was the intention of the appellate court to limit the reversal to the five-twelfths of the property owned by the defendants who served notice of appeal. That it was the intention of the district court of appeal to reverse the entire judgment is' further manifested by the fact that in the briefs in the district court of appeal and in the petition for a transfer to 'this court the plaintiff, the petitioner herein, particularly called attention to the fact that -some of the defendants had not appealed, and asked that the judgment on appeal be rendered in such form that as to the nonappealing defendants the plaintiff’s judgment would be affirmed. The request was not granted. .
*119
It is ordered that a writ of prohibition be granted as prayed for.
Angellotti, C. J., Shaw, J., Sloane, J., Lennon, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred, except Shaw, J.., who was absent.
