delivered the opinion of the court.
This is а cross writ of error taken by Frank T. Wood-worth, defendant in error in . No. 179, ante, 72, and is presented on the record in that case.,
As stated in thе opinion in No. 179, the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the judgment obtained by Woodworth against Chesbrough on the ground that certain amounts computеd in the judgment were not sustained by the evidence and, therefore, remandеd the case for a new trial. Thereupon Woodworth moved to modify the opinion and judgment in such manner as to permit him to remit such part of it as thе court thought was not supported by the evidence and that the judgment, as mоdified, be affirmed. The motion was denied.
A new trial was had, again resulting in a verdict and judgment for Woodworth. The Court of Appeals again decided that it wаs excessive but gave Woodworth permission to file a remission of the еxcess. This he did.
The remittitur recited that plaintiff remits from the judgment the sum of $7,708.56, leaving the amount of the judgment to be $16,005.44. It was stated that it was done in compliance with the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals “for the sole purpose of obtaining the entry of a final judgment herein, and of securing the affirmance of that part of the judgment which is not so remitted, and' is intended to be without prejudice to plaintiff in any cross *81 proceeding hereafter prosecuted by him before the Supreme Court of the United States, which cross proceeding follows and continues to be in connection with any proceeding prosecuted in that court by defendant for the purpose of reviewing said judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals.” .
The Court of Appeals then rendered the following judgment:
“This cause camе on to be heard on the transcript of the record from the District Court оf the United States for the Eastern District of Michigan, Northern Division, and was argued by сounsel.
“The court having filed its opinion, and defendant in error, Woodworth, having thereupon filed in this court a certified copy of a remittitur filed by him in the сourt below whereby it appears that the judgment complained of hеrein has been reduced by the sum of seven thousand seven hundred eight dollars аnd fifty-six cents ($7,708.56) so that it now stands in the court below as a judgment for sixteen thousand fivе dollars and forty-four cents ($16,005.44) and costs, entered as of November 22, 1913, and bеaring interest from the date at five per cent.
“It is now here ordered and adjudged by this court that the judgment of the said District Court in this cause, as so reducеd; and as so standing after such reduction, be, and the same is hereby affirmed; but that plaintiff in error, Chesbrough, recover the costs of this court.
“The remittitur so filed having contained the clause stating that it was intended to be without prejudice to plaintiff below (Woodworth) in the prosecution by him of a cross writ of error or proceeding in the Supreme Court if defendant below should рroceed in that court to review this judgment, and this court being unwilling to embarrass the party, Woodworth, in his attempt to preserve any right of review to which hе may be so contingently entitled, approval of such remittitur as a sufficient com *82 pliance with the opinion on file, is not withheld because of thе presencé therein of such attempted reservation; but such apрroval is not to be taken to imply that such right of review can thereaftеr exist, or that such attempted reservation has any effect to makе the remittitur other than absolute and unconditional.”
In assertion of the right attempted to be reserved Wood-worth prosecutes this writ of error.
A motion is made to dismiss the writ of error, and we think it should be granted. Woodworth is in the somewhat anomalous position of having secured a judgment against Chesbrough and yet seeking to retract the condition upon which it was obtained. This he cannot do.
Koenigsberger
v.
Richmond Silver Mining Co.,
Dismissed.
