(After stating the foregoing facts.) It is the duty of this court upon its own motion to raise the question of its jurisdiction in all cases in which there may be any doubt as to the existence of such jurisdiction; and the present case is one calling for such inquiry.
McDowell
v.
McDowell,
194
Ga.
88, 91 (
The Code, §§ 85-1501 et seq. provides for proceedings to partition lands. While the defendant in its answer prayed “that commissioners be appointed to partition the timber on said property by selling the standing timber,” etc., the order of the trial judge merely appointed five freeholders to partition the property, as authorized by the Code, § 85-1507, and directed the clerk to issue a writ of partition. The Code provides that the five freeholders shall execute such writ, and how objections may be made to their return of the writ to the court. The. judgment excepted to did not order a sale of the timber, as provided in § 85-1511.
In
Berryman
v.
Haden,
112
Ga.
752, 758 (
This court, in Berryman v. Haden, supra, while holding that other assignments of error were premature, considered questions raised by demurrer, because in that case, if the demurrer had been sustained, it would have been, as to the plaintiff in error, a final disposition of the case. However, in the case under consideration, if the entire answer, including the prayer for the appointment of partitioners, had been stricken, the effect of such ruling would still be to leave the suit for injunction pending in the lower court.
The only rulings complained of in the bill of exceptions being the judgment appointing partitioners, and the overruling of the objections and the demurrer to the answer as amended, and no final judgment appearing to have been rendered in the case, this court has no jurisdiction to entertain the writ of error.
Battle
v.
Hambrick,
142
Ga.
807 (
