Court Opinion

ID: 6637351
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:42:10.831425+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:05.971095
License: Public Domain

Blaee, J.
The respondent commenced this action in the probate court to recover the possession of a buggy and obtained a judgment therefor. The appellant then appealed to the district court, anda jury was impaneled to try the cause, and the respondent testified. The following facts appear in his testimony. His claim to the possession of the property was based upon the purchase of a ticket which was delivered to him by the agent of the owner of the buggy. The respondent, having no money at the time, offered to give his check for the price of the ticket, but was told that he could pay for it at any time. The holder of the ticket was entitled to throw the dice at a raffie, and the proxy of the respondent won the buggy in the absence of the respondent. The appellant, as the agent of the owner of the buggy, refused to deliver it to the respondent because the money had not been paid for the ticket before the dice were thrown, and asserted a claim thereto by virtue of the same ticket. The respondent seems to have had no other interest in the property. After the testimony of the respondent was concluded, the appellant moved to exclude the same from the consideration of the jury, and the court sustained the motion.
The appellant then offered to prove that he had bought the buggy of its owner, but the court refused to hear any further testimony, discharged the jury, dismissed the action and declined to enter any judgment for or against either party. The appellant supports the ruling of the court below, respecting the dismissal of the cause, but contends that there should have been a judgment for the return of the buggy to him, or its value, if a delivery thereof could not be had.
*142We think that the appellant has no right to be heard at this time in this court. It appears from the transcript on appeal that no judgment or order, final or otherwise, has been entered. An examination of the Civil Practice Act, defining the judgments and orders from which an appeal may be taken to this court, shows that it does not embrace any matter of which the appellant complains. Civ. Pr. Act, §§ 369, 380. Therefore we will follow the case of Rader v. Nottingham, 2 Mon. 157, and dismiss the appeal on our own motion.
Although we have disposed of this appeal, it is deemed proper to quote with approval the following extract from the opinion of Mr. Justice Belfokd, in Eldred v. Malloy, 2 Col. 321: “ The courts of this Territory have enough to do without devoting their time to the solution of questions arising out of idle bets made on dog and cock-fights, horse-races, the speed of ox trains, the construction of railroads, the number on a dice or the character of a card that may be turned up.” •

Appeal dismissed.