Glenda Lemonds, by her next friend, C. J. Lemonds, sued Dewey Ramsey, Virgil Greenway, Carlmae Holmes and B. W. Young for $20,000 damages on account of personal injuries sustained in an automobile accident. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against Ramsey and Greenway, assessing plaintiff’s damages at $5,000; and against plaintiff and in favor of Holmes and Young. After their respective motions for a new-trial were overruled, Ramsey and Greenway appealed from the judgment in favor of plaintiff and plaintiff appealed from, the judgment in favor of Young and Holmes. Said appeals were lodged here.
Plaintiff, not complaining of or appealing from her $5,000 judgment against Ramsey and Greenway, presents no issue respecting the amount of said judgment. The sole issue upon plaintiff’s appeal is that plaintiff’s* motion for a directed verdict against Holmes and Young should have been sustained. This raises the question of our appellate jurisdiction. Brief mention of some of the underlying principles governing appellate jurisdiction may be of value.
"We have jurisdiction “in all cases where the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, exceeds the sum of $7,500.” Mo. Const. 1945, Art. V, § 3. Consult Mo. Const. 1875, Art. VI, § 12; Amend, of 1884, § 3; Mo. R. S. 1939, Vol. I, pp. 113c, 123c; § 2078, R. S. 1939; Mo. R. S. A.
' ‘ ‘ The amount in dispute * * * is determined by the amount that actually remains in dispute between the parties,
on the appeal,
and
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subject to the determination by the appellate court of the legal questions raised by the record.” State ex rel. v. Reynolds,
Being a court of limited appellate jurisdiction, our jurisdiction must affirmatively appear of record and is not to be left to chance, speculation or conjecture. Higgins v. Smith,
Disputed amounts eliminated at the trial are eliminated in arriving at the amount in dispute. Bietsch v. Midwest Piping & S. Co. (Mo.),
Our jurisdiction depends on live issues, issues really in existence. Issues involving amounts in excess of $7,500 which stand abandoned on appeal have been considered colorable and meritless, and insufficient to vest appellate jurisdiction here. Ashbrook v. Willis,
We reserve to ourselves the right to pierce the shell of the pleadings,.proofs, record, and judgment sufficiently far to determine that our proper jurisdiction is not infringed upon, or improper jurisdiction is not foisted upon us. State ex rel. v. Reynolds,
Plaintiff says she prayed for $20,000 damages and since there was a verdict in favor of Holmes and Young, the controversy between said litigants involves $20,000, citing Bunner v. Patti (Mo. App., 1937),
The Walsh and Morton cases, supra, and cases there cited, are authority for the propositions that there can be only one final judgment, finally disposing of the ease as to all parties (§ 1243, R. S. 1939, Mo. R. S. A.); that a ease remains one case on appeal notwithstanding two or more parties take an appeal from the judgment, and that when the appeal of any appellant vests jurisdiction here, «the whole case must be heard here. Accordingly, we have taken jurisdiction where plaintiff has appealed from a judgment exonerating one defendant, although a codefendant was held liable for $7,500 or less, when plaintiff prayed for a judgment in excess of $7,500.
In Stotler v. Chicago & Alton Ry. Co. (1906),
At the time of the Walsh and Morton cases, supra, as well as for sometime subsequent thereto, the amount in dispute was the amount prayed for in plaintiff’s petition where plaintiff appealed from a judgment exonerating one of several tortfeasors although plaintiff secured a judgment for $7,500 or less against the other tortfeasors because, as held in the cases infra, if plaintiff’s appeal'disclosed error and there was no error respecting plaintiff’s judgment against the other defendants it was necessary under the law as it then stood to remand the case for new trial, material to the instant issue, on the issue of plaintiff’s damages as to
all
defendants, including any defendant previously held liable, and on the issue of liability as to the exonerated defendant only. This holding was on the theory that two trials would result in verdicts for different amounts, improper in a tort action against codefendants.
*630
Neal v. Curtis & Co. Mfg. Co. (Div. I, 1931),
However, the situation changed with the overruling of the Neal and the Barr cases, supra, in Hoelzel v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co. (Div. I, 1935),
This change effected in our law by the Hoelzel case has been followed and applied in McCombs v. Ellsberry,
In view of our general holdings hereinbefore mentioned, the right of a plaintiff to hold the amount of a verdict about which no question is raised, the fact that no issue is presented here involving any inadequacy of the $5,000 judgment, and that at all times since the verdict and judgment defendants Holmes and Young could have satisfied plaintiff’s claim by confessing judgment in favor of plaintiff for $5,000, the amount in dispute on this appeal is $5,000 notwithstanding plaintiff’s prayer for $20,000 damages, and appellate jurisdiction is in the court of appeals.
The effect of the Hoelzel case, supra, upon the appellate jurisdictional issue was not considered in Atterbury v. Temple Stephens Co., Brown v. Reorganization Inv. Co., Ruehling v. Pickwick-Greyhound Lines, Inc., or Bunner v. Patti (Mo. App.), all supra. They are no longer to be followed insofar as they may conflict herewith.
The cause is transferred to the Springfield Court of Appeals.
PER CURIAM: — The foregoing opinion by Boi-iling, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court en Banc.
Notes
This court retained jurisdiction of Bunner v. Patti (1938),
