The circuit court granted the lien claimants a new trial, and Mrs. Holcker took an appeal from said order to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. In that court there were two hearings. January 17, 1917, there was an opinion by Judge Ellison, reversing and remanding the cause with directions to the circuit court “to reinstate the verdict and enter judgment against the liens.”
The case was then held up in the Kansas' City Court of Appeals to await the decision of this court in Boeckler
*658
Lumber Company v. Wahlbrink, which had been certified bo this court by the St. Louis Court of Appeals,
After our ruling in that case, the instant case was set down for re-argument in the Kansas City Court of Appeals. June 17,1919, the Kansas City Court of Appeals rendered, through Trimble, J., a second opinion, in the lower court by which the order was again reversed, with directions to reinstate the verdict of the jury and enter judgment against the lien claimants. November 10, 1919, the motion for re-hearing was overruled. November 10,1919, a motion was filed by some of the lien claimants to withhold mandate, but this record does not show the action of the Kansas City Court of Appeals thereon. Relators here were not parties to this application. The application for our writ of certiorari was filed here on August 6, 1920.
Counsel for the respondents here, have filed in this court a certified copy of a judgment in the Circuit Court of Jackson County entered on the 30th day of December, 1919, by which it appears that on such date said circuit court entered up a judgment in accordance with the directions of the Kansas City Court of Appeals. It is charged in respondents’ brief that the term has elapsed, and that judgment was not appealed from by any of the lien claimants. We judicially know that the term had elapsed, and further that no appeal can be taken from a judgment in a circuit court which has been entered by the express direction of an appellate court. This states the case for the single point, which we deem settles what our judgment here should be, on the record before us.
*660
In the reply brief of relator it is urg;ed as an excuse for the delay that they brought in this court an action in mandamus to compel the Court of Appeals to so write their opinion as to state the facts, as a preliminary step toward filing the present action. -We are asked to examine our record as to this, or rather to judicially know this fact. Whether proper or improper, we have examined our records, and the application for mandamus was not filed until April 17,1920, and was refused by us on April 30, 1920. So that it appears that no steps were taken by relator until long after the circuit court had entered up its judgment in accordance with the directions of the Court of Appeals.
Under such circumstances after most serious consideration, we are forced to two conclusions (1) that the laches of the relator should require us to quash our writ, and (2) that where the Court of Appeals has, upon request of an aggrieved party, stayed its mandate for a reasonable time to allow such party to apply to this court for a writ of certiorari, and after the expiration of such reasonable time, and no action has been taken by the aggrieved party, then their mandate should go down. And further, if thereafter, the judgment of the Court of Appeals sought to be quashed has been fully executed, our writ should not go, and if it has gone, it should be quashed. The question of a reasonable time we take next.
Section 1520, Revised Statutes 1919, requires the clerk of this court to certify a copy of the opinion to the circuit court within thirty days after it has been filed. The statute says that he “shall” so certify it within the thirty days. We construe our filing of the opinion for the purpose of this statute to- be the day upon which we overruled the motion for rehearing. This because motions for rehearing might pend more than thirty days, and if not thus construed we might have the clerk certifying out our opinion and mandate, with a motion for rehearing pending, which motion might thereafter be sustained. When so ruled we have a period of thirty days between the overruling of the motion, and the day upon which the clerk shall certify out the opinion. By Sec. 15, Article VI of the Constitution the foregoing statute is made'applicable to the Courts of Appeals. Having due regard to this statutory provision, we conclude that these thirty days should be the limit of reasonable time for aggrieved parties in the Courts of Appeals to get their application to this court. Of course Courts of Appeals, like this court, have control over their mandates and other process, and could grant a longer stay, if the necessities of the case required, and this court might be governed by extreme circumstances to hold a longer time to be within reason, yet it occurs to us that in the usual run of these certiorari cases this thirty day period, is a reasonable time, and in many cases more than reasonable time within which to apply to the Court of Appeals for a stay of mandate, and get their application for our writ duly served and filed here. The application to the Court of Appeals for stay of mandate should shortly follow the overruling of the motion for rehearing.
Under all the facts in this case, our writ heretofore granted, for the reasons aforesaid, should be quashed, *663 and it is so ordered.
