141 Mo. 305 | Mo. | 1897
— A suit in equity was commenced by the plaintiffs in the circuit court of Pettis county to compel the defendant Smith to account to plaintiffs as creditors of the Sedalia University Company for certain moneys therein alleged to have been fraudulently obtained by him out of certain real estate in which the said university had an equity. In due time Messrs.
I. The plaintiffs insist there is no judgment from which an appeal will lie. The point thus raised must be determined by our statutes and the analogies of the law. Prior to April 18, 1891, our civil code provided that “every person aggrieved by any final judgment or decision of any circuit court in any civil cause....... may make his appeal to the court having appellate jurisdiction of such judgment or decision.” R. S. 1889, sec. 2246.
By the act of 1891 (Laws 1891, p.70), it was provided that: ‘ ‘Any party to a suit aggrieved by any j udgment of any circuit court in any civil cause from which an appeal is not prohibited by the Constitution, may take his appeal to the court having appellate jurisdic
The appeal in this cause was granted at the May term, 1895, and on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1895, consequently the act of 1891 above quoted was in force at that time and must govern. The act of 1895, Laws of 1895, page 91, did not go into effect until June 21, 1895.
It will be noted that an order or judgment setting aside a nonsuitfis not enumerated in the statute as an order from which an appeal may be taken. If permitted, then it must be under the general clause allowing an appeal from “any final judgment.”
Is such an order a final judgment? . In West v. McMullen, 112 Mo. 405, this court said: /‘When the court set aside the nonsuit, the parties were right where they were when the issues were first made up. No right of the plaintiffs or defendants had been adjudicated. Plaintiffs had been driven to a nonsuit and the setting aside simply restored them to a standing in court; they occupied precisely the same position as if they had voluntarily dismissed their suit and commenced a new action and defendant had answered. The only effect was to reinstate the cause for trial.” Now a judgment is the final determination of the right of the parties in the action. R. S. 1889, sec. 2206. In Ins. Co. v. Broughton, 109 U. S. 121, the Supreme Court of the United States said: “A judgment of nonsuit does
Can argument make it clearer that the mere setting aside of the nonsuit is in no sense a final determination of the right of either the plaintiff or the defendant? If so, what does it determine? The court has decided nothing in the cause save that the cause be reinstated. It is altogether different from the action of a court in forcing a plaintiff by an adverse ruling to take a nonsuit and then refusing to take off the nonsuit when moved by the losing party to do so. In this latter case this court has permitted an appeal from the earliest period of its existence. In such a case, however, the appeal is allowed on the principle that with the adverse determination of the court against him after an ineffectual effort to get the court to reverse itself, it is impossible for the party to obtain a final judgment in his favor. It is to all intents a finality as against the party and unless he can appeal he has no redress. English v. Mullanphy, 1 Mo. 780; Collins v. Bowmer, 2 Mo. 195; State to use Bates Co. v. Smith, 65 Mo. 464.
Not so with the defendant in such a case, however. The ruling is in his favor and when the nonsuit is set aside nothing is adjudged‘against him.
Prior to the act of 1891 it was the uniform rule to deny an appeal for the granting of a new trial for the reason that the decision was in no sense a finality, because the court retained control of the case. Said this court in Martin v. Hays, 5 Mo. 62: “When the verdict was set aside the cause stood upon its original ground, open for trial. Then it was not finally decided, but was still pending” and writ of error did not lie. And it has invariably been held that no appeal lies from a mere voluntary nonsuit nor from an involuntary nonsuit unless a motion to set aside was filed and
The act of 1891 was before this court in lane for interpretation in Greeley v. Railroad, 123 Mo. 157, and it was pointed out that it was the purpose to allow appeals from certain orders which up to that time had been held to be merely interlocutory and not final in their nature, and the appeal in that case was dismissed because an order appointing a receiver was not mentioned among those orders mentioned by the statute of 1891. Applying the reasoning of that case, it is obvious, we think, that as an order setting aside a nonsuit is not final and as the statute has not made it appeal-able in terms, it must-be held that an appeal can not be prosecuted therefrom and the appeal in this case must be and is dismissed.