169 Ind. 204 | Ind. | 1907
Appellee Coffin, as commissioner, charged with the construction of the public ditch here involved, filed
In this latter ease the court held that if a decree or judgment leaves important questions for further adjudication it is not final. In Elliott, App. Proc., §88, it is said: “No order is final in such a sense as to constitute a final judgment unless it disposes of the main case so far as there is power in the trial court to decide upon the questions presented by the issues, no matter how clearly and decisively the order may indicate what the ultimate judgment -will be. Until there is an ultimate judgment the ease is not finally disposed of inasmuch as the trial court may change its rulings, * * * or make some such order, notwithstanding the fact that in other rulings it may have clearly manifested a purpose to carry its rulings into the ultimate judgment or decree. A decretal order although interlocutory in its nature may, of course, be carried forward and embodied in a final decree and thus become an essential part of that decree, but until it is so embodied in the final decree no appeal will lie. The rule that no matter how decisive may seem the ruling of the trial court it is not a final judgment, is well illustrated by the cases in which rulings were made denying a motion for a judgment on a special verdict or on the answers of a jury to special interrogatories, for such a ruling is seemingly as clearly indicative of what the final judgment will be, as it is possible for any order to be, except, of course, the ultimate judgment itself. ’ ’
In Pfeiffer v. Crane (1883), 89 Ind. 485, a final'judgment was thus defined and differentiated from an interlocutory order: “A final judgment is the ultimate determination of the court upon the whole controversy in the action. An order of the court, made in the progress of the cause, requiring something to be done or observed, but not determining the controversy, is an interlocutory order, and is sometimes
In Goodwin v. Goodwin (1874), 48 Ind. 584, it was said: “There is no statute authorizing an appeal -from the order or action of the court in allowing or passing a partial settlement of an estate.” It was held in Cravens v. Chambers (1876), 55 Ind. 5, that an assignee could not appeal from
The rendition of interlocutory judgments for costs is a common incident of proceedings in court (§623 Burns 1901,' §596 R. S. 1881), and if an appeal were authorized from every order to which a judgment of costs is appended, it would operate to split up and multiply appeals. The question before us was decided in Hamrick v. Danville, etc., Road Co., supra, the court holding that a judgment for costs rendered during the pendency of the proceedings was not a final judgment, and was not an appealable order within the statute authorizing appeals from interlocutory orders in certain cases.
Appellant’s counsel rely on Racer v. Wingate (1894), 138 Ind. 114, as authority for the prosecution of an appeal from the order of the court below. The order which was appealed from in the case referred to provided that the drainage commissioner “be and hereby is relieved from all further responsibility relative to the construction of said ditch.” Such an order more nearly approached a final order than is found in the proceedings of the court in this case, but in any event the case of Racer v. Wingate, supra, cannot be regarded as a precedent in favor of our jurisdiction, because the court there stated that the sole question in that case related to the propriety of entering the order, thus showing affirmatively that the question as to whether the order was interlocutory did not receive any consideration by the court. So far as the order or judgment in question left undeter
The conclusions which we have reached must lead to a dismissal of the appeal in this cause. Appellees ’ motion to dismiss the appeal is therefore sustained, on the ground that the order or judgment from which it is prosecuted is not final. The appeal is therefore dismissed at the cost of appellant.