140 Ind. 472 | Ind. | 1894
— This was a suit by the appellees against the appellant and the. Pennsylvania Company, for equitable relief.
It is alleged, in substance, in the complaint, that George S. Wood died, in Porter county, on June 28, 1890, unmarried, 28 years old, and left surviving him as his only next of kin and heirs at law appellant, his mother, and appellee Charles Wood, a half brother, and appellees Grace M/Clites and Myrza E. Clites, children of a deceased sister; that the defendant, the Pennsylvania Company, was, and had been for more than five years, operating a railroad through said county, and that the death of said Wood came to him through the negligence
Prayer that the judgment for costs against the administratrix be set aside, and for a decree that said judgment against said company be held by said Martha in trust for herself and the plaintiffs in the proportions fixed by the statute of distributions, and other proper relief.
Two of the plaintiffs, Grace M. and Myrza E. Clites, were minors, and sue by next friend, and the other, Charles Wood, was an adult, and sued in his own name.
■After overruling separate demurrers by each of the defendants, Martha Wood and the Pennsylvania Company, there were separate answers, upon which issues were formed.
A trial thereof resulted in a special finding by the court, upon which it stated conclusions of law against the appellant Martha Wood and the appellee, the Pennsylvania Company, upon which the other appellees, Clites and Clites and Charles Wood, had judgment and decree that said Martha Wood was equitably entitled to $250 of said judgment to reimburse her for her expense and costs in obtaining the same, and as to $1,000 of the principal thereof, and the 'interest thereon, one-half thereof belongs to said Martha Wood, and one-fourth thereof belongs to Grace M. and Myrza E. Clites, and the remaining fourth thereof belongs to the plaintiff Charles Wood, and that the same is collectible by and in favor of said respective parties in the proportions aforesaid, and that the plaintiffs recover their costs from the defendants.
The conclusions of law are assigned for error. The Pennsylvania company was a coparty and codefendant in the complaint, and was a coparty to the judgment, and is bound thereby until it is reversed or set aside.
If the defect deprives this court of jurisdiction in any case, it certainly does in this case. As already observed, the condition of this appeal is the same as if the Pennsylvania Company had not been made a party at all. The effect of the judgment and decree appealed from is to authorize that company to pay one-half of $1,000 of the original judgment to other parties than the original judgment plaintiff Martha Wood. She appeals, and seeks to reverse that adjudication without bringing the Pennsylvania Company properly before this court so as to bind it by such reversal. In the meantime, it may have paid the judgment to parties entitled thereto under the last
The appeal is therefore dismissed.
petition to set aside dismissal overruled Feb.7,’95