delivered the opinion of the court.
These are appeals from orders of the Circuit Court remanding the above-entitled cases to the state ■ court, which appeals the records show wére “ granted under the ■ provisions of the act-of February 25, 1889, on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction of the cause.”
*46
Before the act of 1875, c. 137,18 Stat. 470, we held that an order by the Circuit Court remanding a cause was not such a final judgment or decree in a civil action as to give us jurisdiction for its review by writ of error or appeal. The appro-. priate remedy in such a case was then, by mandamus, to compel the Circuit Court to hear and decide.
Babbitt
v.
Clark,
The act of February 25,-1889, 25 Stat. 693, c. 236, provides that “ in all cases where a final judgment or decree shall be rendered in a Circuit Court of the United -States in which .there shall have been a question involving the jurisdiction of ■the- court, the party against whom the judgment or decree is rendered- shall be entitled to ah appeal or writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States to review such judgment or decree, without reference to the amount of the same; but in cases where the decree or-judgment does hot.exceed the sum of five thousand dollars the Supreme Court shall not re *47 view any question raised upon the record except such question of jurisdiction.”
The words “ a final judgment or decree,” in this act, are manifestly used in the-same sense as in the prior statutes which have received interpretation, and these orders to remand were not final judgments or decrees whatever the ground upon which the Circuit Court proceeded.
Graves
v.
Corbin,
_ Areals dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
