125 N.W. 560 | N.D. | 1910
This cause was here on a former appeal. See 16 N. D. 68, 111 N. W. 612, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1099. It was there held that
The questions discussed in appellant’s brief are not properly before us, for the obvious reason that the order complained of is not an appealable order. It is well settled that no appeal lies from an order refusing to dismiss an action or to nonsuit a plaintiff. 2 Cyc. 596, and numerous cases cited in note 21. It is a well-known fact that our statute relating to appeals, being section 7225, Rev. Codes 1905, was borrowed from Wisconsin. Such statute was construed in Waldo v. Rice, 18 Wis. 405, and the Supreme Court of that state, speaking through Dixon, C. J., held that an order refusing to dismiss a cause for want of prosecution is not appealable. That court has subsequently adhered to the rule there announced. Reed v. Lueps, 30 Wis. 561. We are entirely satisfied with the correctness of the rule thus announced by the Wisconsin court. The statute was borrowed from Wisconsin in 1887, and the presumption is that the construction previously placed upon it by the Wisconsin court was borrowed with it.
That an appeal will not lie from the portion of the order allowing plaintiff to amend his complaint is too clear for discussion. Such an order is not included within any of the five subdivisions of section 7225, supra.
It follows that the appeal must be dismissed, and it is so ordered.
Note. — For note on appealable and non-appealable orders, see Olson v. Mattison, 16 N. D. 231. An order after judgment in condemnation suit, directing its cleric to retain money paid on the judgment, pending the set