Court Opinion

ID: 7103899
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:18:40.148443+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:30.264101
License: Public Domain

Beck, J.
An amended abstract, which is not denied, shows that the notice of appeal discloses that defendant appeals from the decision of the district court made at an adjourned term in November, 1887. Appeals may be taken to this court from judgments and decisions of the district court. Code, sec. 3163. A judgment is a final adjudication of the rights of the parties. Id., sec. 2849. A decision is an adjudication of a question submitted to the court. It may be of intermediate matters, or it may be of questions finally disposing of the case. From all decisions involving the merits and materially affecting the final judgment appeals may be taken; and a decision affecting a substantial right and other decisions specified may be appealed from. Id., sec. 3164. But many decisions made in a case cannot be appealed from. An appeal is taken by service of a notice stating the appeal from the case, or from some specific part thereof. Id., sec. 3178. It appears that an appeal may be general, from all judgments and decisions of the case from which appeals may be taken, or it may be specific, from a particular judgment or or decision. In the case before us it is not general, for it is from “the decision” at a certain term, and it is not from a final decision and judgment. We cannot hold that the appeal is from the final judgment. The language of the notice does not so declare, and will not bear an interpretation to that effect.
The word “decision” used in the notice means an adjudication other than a final decision. But there *27were many decisions of that character. Appellants have failed to indicate in their notice what decision they appeal from. We cannot say that they appeal from all decisions. The notice of appeal is fatally defective. Plaintiff’s motion to dismiss the appeal must therefore be sustained. Dismissed.