The respondent Superintendent of Insurance asks leave to file here a motion to transfer the above causes from Division II to this court en banc on the ground that a federal question is involved. He has also filed a similar motion in Division II, where the causes 'have been finally determined adversely to him. His explanation of the reason for this duplicated procedure is that if the motion to transfer be overruled by Division II he will not have exhausted all available means of securing an appellate review of the causes by this court en banc, unless he files the same motion here. This, he says, is prerequisite to an application for review by certiorari or appeal in the United Statés Supreme Court, under á recent decision of that court in Gorman v. Washington Univérsity, 62 Sup. Ct. 962,
We do not so read the Gorman decision. According to our understanding it was based on the fact that no application for a transfer had been made
to Division I
of this court after adverse determination of the cause by that Division. [See Washington University v. Gorman,
*857
Ever since the decision of State v. Duestrow,
Respondent calls attention to McFadin v. Catron,
■ The Amendment of 1890 was adopted to expedite the work of the court by creating two divisions of concurrent jurisdiction, each.with the separate power to adjudicate causes coming to the court; and with the further power to determine when causes before it shall be transferred to the court' en banc under -Sec.’ 4 of the Amendment.
The application for leave to file en banc a motion to transfer the causes from Division II is denied.
