Stimson v. Stimson

Citation152 N.W. 132,30 N.D. 78
Decision Date16 March 1915
CourtUnited States State Supreme Court of North Dakota

From a judgment of the District Court of Dunn County, Crawford, J Plaintiff appeals.

Dismissed.

Appeal dismissed.

F. E McCurdy, Bismarck, and Casey & Burgeson, Dickinson, North Dakota, for plaintiff and appellant.

C. H Starke, Dickinson, North Dakota, for defendant and respondent.

OPINION

CHRISTIANSON, J.

Respondent moves to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that the only question presented in this appeal has been determined on a former appeal in this case, and that the judgment from which the present appeal is taken was entered in accordance with the remittitur from this court on the former appeal. The material facts appearing from the record in this case are as follows: The present action was commenced by the service of summons and complaint in April, 1913. The defendant appeared and demurred to the complaint on September 25, 1913. The demurrer was brought on for argument, and the trial court sustained the demurrer, but granted plaintiff leave to serve an amended complaint. Such amended complaint was served October 22, 1913. The defendant thereupon moved that the amended complaint be stricken from the files for the reason that it changed the claim set forth in the original complaint, and set forth an entirely different cause of action. This motion was submitted to the court, and on December 12, 1913, the court entered its order granting defendant's motion, and ordered the amended complaint to be stricken from the files. On February 9th, 1914, the plaintiff perfected an appeal from the order striking the amended complaint from the files. On September 10, 1914, pursuant to notice, the appeal from such order was dismissed by this court for failure to prosecute the same. On September 16, 1914, the district court, in accordance with the remittitur from this court and the provisions of the order striking the amended complaint from the files, entered its order for judgment for a dismissal of the action, and judgment was thereafter entered pursuant to the order for judgment. On December 3d, 1914, the plaintiff perfected an appeal from the judgment. The only error asserted on this appeal is that the court erred in granting defendant's motion to strike the amended complaint from the files. This is the same ground that was urged as error on the appeal from the order striking the amended complaint from the files. It is not seriously contended that this appeal can be sustained, if the order striking the amended complaint from the files was an appealable order. Appellant's counsel contends that this order was not appealable, and could only be reviewed on an appeal from the judgment.

Section 109 of the Constitution provides: "Writs of error and appeals may be allowed from the decisions of the district courts to the supreme court under such regulations as may be prescribed by law." And while the law usually considers it a right of a suitor to have his rights examined in some appellate tribunal, still this right pertains to the remedy given, and in the absence of constitutional inhibition, it is within the power of the legislature to prescribe the cases in which the parties are entitled to a review by the appellate court. 2 Cyc. 507; 2 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 19. And it is a general principle of law that in the absence of a statute permitting it, an appeal will not lie from an interlocutory order or judgment, but there must be a final order, judgment, or decree rendered in the cause to permit a review. Appeals from interlocutory orders are entirely the creation of statute and will only lie in the cases authorized by the statute. 2 Cyc. 586, 591; 2 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 61.

The legislature of this state, in conformity with the constitutional provision, has adopted certain statutes regarding appeals. And in so doing has provided for a review upon appeal of certain interlocutory orders. The statute in question is § 7841, Compiled Laws, 1913. If this order is appealable, it must be classified with those orders enumerated in subdivision 4 of this section, which grants an appeal from an order "when it involves the merits of an action or some part thereof."

As stated by this court in the case of Bolton v Donavan, 9 N.D. 575, 84 N.W. 357, our statute relative to appeals from orders is almost identical in terms with the statutes of Wisconsin, Minnesota, and South Dakota, as they existed at the time of that decision. And in Strecker v. Railson, 19 N.D. 677, 678, 125 N.W. 560, this court stated that our statute relative to appeals was borrowed from Wisconsin, and this is doubtless correct. The parent statute, of which § 7841 was a part, was first incorporated in the laws of this jurisdiction by the legislature of Dakota territory in 1887, where it is found as § 23 of chapter 20 of the Laws of Dakota. It was again re-enacted without change, by the legislature of this state in 1891. See § 24, chapter 120, Laws of North Dakota for 1891. This section was at the time of its original enactment adopted literally from Wisconsin, being § 3069 of the Wisconsin Revised Statutes of 1878. The Wisconsin statute apparently remained unchanged up to 1895, but by the amendment adopted by the Wisconsin legislature that year, the provision corresponding to subdivision 4 of § 7841, N.D. Compiled Laws of 1913, was eliminated, so the decisions in Wisconsin subsequent to 1895 are inapplicable so far as a construction of the provisions of this section are concerned. But prior to its re-enactment by the legislature of this state in 1891, and prior to its original enactment by the territorial legislature in 1887, the particular provision under consideration had been construed a number of times by the supreme court of Wisconsin. Thus, in Matteson v. Curtis, 14 Wis. 436, that court held that an order allowing a defendant to file a supplemental answer was appealable; and in Clark v. Langworthy, 12 Wis. 441, an order denying a motion to make a complaint more specific was held appealable; and in Akerly v. Vilas, 21 Wis. 377, an order refusing leave to withdraw a reply and interpose a demurrer in place thereof was held appealable; and in Spensley v. Janesville Mfg. Co., 62 Wis. 549, 22 N.W. 574, an order denying a motion to make the complaint more definite and certain was held appealable; in Nischke v. Wirth, 66 Wis. 319, 28 N.W. 342, an order requiring an answer to be made more definite and certain was held appealable; and in Adamson v. Raymer, 94 Wis. 243, 68 N.W. 1000, an order striking out material portions of an answer was held appealable; and in Kewaunee County v. Decker, 34 Wis. 378, an order refusing to strike an amended complaint from the files was held appealable. The supreme court of Iowa, in construing a similar provision in the laws of that state, has held the following orders to be appealable: An order denying a motion to strike out a portion of the complaint (Seiffert & W. Lumber Co. v. Hartwell, 94 Iowa 576, 58 Am. St. Rep. 413, 63 N.W. 333); an order overruling a motion to strike out an amendment to a petition in intervention (Bicklin v. Kendall, 72 Iowa 490, 34 N.W. 283); an order striking out material and relevant portions of an answer (Mast v. Wells, 110 Iowa 128, 81 N.W. 230). And in the case of Barnes v. Century Sav. Bank, 149 Iowa 367, 128 N.W. 541, 545, the Iowa court held that an order granting a motion to strike a part of a reply was appealable, and in that case the court, speaking through Chief Justice Deemer, said: "In the light of past decisions, there can be no doubt that ruling on the motion to strike is an appealable one." The supreme court of Michigan in the case of McMann v. Westcott, 47 Mich. 177, 10 N.W. 190, held that an order striking an amended bill was appealable, and the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Fuller v. Claflin, 93 U.S. 14, 23 L.Ed. 785, held that an order striking out an answer was appealable. See also Schaetzel v. Huron, 6 S.D. 134, 60 N.W. 741, and Whitlaw v. Illinois L. Ins. Co., 86 Kan. 826, 122 P. 1039. The supreme court of Minnesota, in construing a similar statutory provision in that state, held in Wolf v. Banning, 3 Minn. 202, Gil. 133, an order striking out an answer with leave to answer again; and in Kingsley v. Gilman, 12 Minn. 515, Gil. 425, an order striking out portions of an answer; in Harlan v. St. Paul, M. & M. R. Co., 31 Minn. 427, 18 N.W. 147, an order striking out an answer; and in Vermilye v. Vermilye, 32 Minn. 499, 18 N.W. 832, 21 N.W. 736, an order striking out a portion of an answer,--to be appealable orders. And in Floody v. Chicago, St. P. M. & O. R. Co., 104 Minn. 132, 116 N.W. 111, that court, speaking through Chief Justice Stark, said: "An order striking out a pleading or a material part thereof is appealable; but one refusing to strike out is not." ...

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