l^EADINGS. This is an action in which the plaintiff’s petition contained three counts, in the first and third of which it is alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of thirty shares of stock in a certain business corporation, which the defendants had * ' wrongfully converted to their own use to the damage of plaintiff, etc.
The second was in the nature of a bill in equity, having for its object to obtain a decree: First, that the defendants be required to deliver up the certificates of said stock; second, that they have no right, title or interest in said certificates; third, that they be enjoined from claiming or' exercising any right or authority over said stock; and fourth, for all other proper relief.
The trial court required the plaintiff to ‘elect whether he would proceed to trial of the cause of action alleged in the first and third counts, or on that' alleged'in the second. The plaintiff thereupon elected to proceed on the first and third counts. To these counts the defendants filed an answer.
The trial was by a jury. At the conclusion of all the evidence the court, by an instruction requested by *105the defendants, told the jury that under the pleadings and evidence the defendants were entitled to a verdict. The plaintiff thereupon suffered a nonsuit and after an unsuccessful motion to set the same aside took an appeal here.
The cause of action alleged in the first and third counts is one at law, while that alleged in the second count is in equity.
The action of the court in requiring the plaintiff to elect on which one of the causes of action alleged in his petition he would first try was proper since it was necessary to try each separately. Kabrich v. Ins. Co., 48 Mo. App. 397. All the counts could not be tried together, since those alleging a cause of action at law were triable before a jury and that in equity could only be tried by the court. One was triable on the law side of the court and the other on its equity side. Boeckler v. R’y, 10 Mo. App. 452; Crow v. Peters, 63 Mo. 435; Henderson v. Dickey, 50 Mo. 164; Jones v. Moore, 42 Mo. 419.
When the court at the end of the trial on the law counts of the petition instructed the jury to find for the defendants the instruction went only to the issue on trial before the jury. The equity count in the petition was not affected by the instruction. The plaintiff did not suffer a nonsuit on the law counts of his petition but suffered it as to the whole case and from the judgment of nonsuit has appealed. If he had suffered a nonsuit as to the law counts and then proceeded to trial on the equity count and had a final decree entered therein, or if he had dismissed the equity count and then suffered a nonsuit as to the law counts, there would have been a final disposition of the entire case from which an appeal would lie.
*106Afudgmlnuvóiunímtary1 nonsuit. *105“The judgment or decision from which an appeal may be taken must be final — it must be that judgment *106or decision which, determines finally the rights of the parties to the action. R’y v. R’y, 94 Mo. 542; Anderson v. Moberly, 46 Mo. 191. The plaintiff, it seems, elected to go out of court as to his whole case and by so doing he took a voluntary nonsuit. As long as the equity count had not been stricken out or otherwise disposed of he was not “at the end of his row” for he still was entitled to a trial on that. The rule is well settled in this state that if anything substantial is left in a case on which a party can stand he must proceed to final hearing of the whole. Loring v. Cooke, 60 Mo. 566; Chiles v. Wallace, 83 Mo. 93; Schulter v. Bockwinkle, 19 Mo. 647; Layton v. Riney, 33 Mo. 87; Hageman v. Moreland, 33 Mo. 86; Lanney v. Schoeffler, 20 Mo. 323; R. R. v. Mitchell, 20 Mo. 432; Koger v. Hays, 57 Mo. 329.
Kirby v. Bruns, 45 Mo. 234, was a case in which the petition contained two counts — one in ejectment and the other in equity. A jury trial was had as in an ordinary action at law. There were no issues framed and submitted to the jury and no decision on the equitable merits of the cause. At the trial, because of supposed improper instructions to the jury as to the law of the case, the plaintiff took a nonsuit as to the whole case. There was, as here, no submission of the equity branch of the case to the court at all. On an appeal to the supreme court from the judgment, that court said: “This practice is not allowable. The non-suit as to the equity side of the litigation was purely voluntary and the case must be disposed of as in other instances of voluntary nonsuit.” Citing, Schulter v. Bockminkle, 19 Mo. 647; Danney v. Schoeffler, 20 Mo. 323; Lone v. Palmer, 28 Mo. 539; Gentry Co. v. Black, 32 Mo. 542; Hagerman v. Moreland, 33 Mo. 86, 87.
As was said in Danney v. Schoeffler, supra: “Upon *107the case then as it appears the party — appellant—was not forced to take this nonsuit, as the action of the court below did not cover his whole case, we must let the judgment stand.”
All concur.