after making the foregoing statement, delivered the -opinion of the tíourt.
By its judgment the Supreme Court of Iowa revérsed the decree of the trial court and remanded, the.cause “fob.further proceedings in’harmony with the opinion.of this court.”
We have heretofore held that a judgment couched in such terms is not final in such a sense as to sustain a writ of error from this court.
Haseltine
v.
Bank,
It is true that in Iowa the Supreme Court hears equity cases on appeal
de novó,
and the successful party is entitled to a decree in that court, if he moves for it,
First National Bank
v.
Baker,
And it has been repeatedly held by that court that when a case triable
de novo
is remanded for judgment in the court below, the parties may be permitted to introduce material evi
*176
dence discovered since the original trial, and may amend the pleadings for the purpose of setting up matters materially affecting the merits, subsequently occurring.
Sanxey
v.
Iowa City Glass Company,
Doubtless, the conclusions arrived at by the state Supreme Court, and expressed in its opinion, furnish the grounds on which the court below must proceed, when the case goes to a decree there, if no change in. pleadings or proof takes place, but we cannpt say what action might nevertheless be taken, and as no decree was entered in the Supreme Court, and no specific instruction was given to the court below, we think the writ of error cannot be maintained. Assuming, without deciding, that a Federal question was so raised as otherwise to have justified the exercise of our jurisdiction, we can but repeat what we said in Haseltine’s case: “The plaintiffs in the case under consideration could have secured an immediate review by this court, if the court as a part of its judgment of reversal had ordered the Circuit Court to dismiss, their petition, when, under Mower v. Fletcher, they might-have sued out a writ of error at once.”
Writ of- error dismissed.
