This -cause was commenced in the municipal court of the city of Lead by plaintiff to recover from defendant the sum of $78.87 and interest, then amounting to $4.14, and 'being an action cognizable before a justice of the peace. There was a trial which resulted in a judgment being entered.in favor of plaintiff for $83.02 damages and $21.08 costs. Thereafter defendant moved for a new trial on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision and judgment, and, upon such motion coming on to be heard, the said court vacated the said original judgment in favor of plaintiff and rendered a new and modified judgment in favor of plaintiff for $28.87 damages and $11 costs. This modification was effected by the allowance of a payment of $50, of which defendant gave evidence on the trial. From this modified judgment and order the plaintiff has appealed direct to this court. The defendant moves this court, by order to show cause, to dismiss the appeal on -the ground that this court has no jurisdiction to- entertain such appeal. It is the contention of defendant, tire respondent, that, the action being one cognizable before a justice of the peace, an appeal will only lie to the circuit court, and not to this court, except' through the circuit court, while it is contended by appellant that he has only appealed from the order vacating the original judgment, and that all orders made by the municipal court are appealable direct to the Supreme Court. The notice of appeal, omitting title, date, and signature, reads as follows:
“Take notice that the plaintiff and appellant above named hereby appeals to the Supreme Court from the order made and entered in said action on the 20th day of February, 1915, vacating the judgment theretofore entered in this action in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant, and from the whole thereof, and from the pretended judgment embodied in said order.”
It will be noted that appellant has, by his notice of appeal, appealed from the modified' judgment, and that his contention that he has appealed from the “order” only i-s not in harmony with the record, although we are of the view that the result would be the same even if appellant had appealed only from the *354order vacating the original judgment. The first sentence of section 7, c. 278, Laws of 1913, reads:
“All appeals from judgments or orders of said court shall be taken to the Supreme Court in the same manner and under the same restrictions, within the same time, and with the same effect, as appeals are taken from the -circuit -court to the Supreme -Court: Provided, however, that in actions which would otherwise be cognizable before a justice of the peace except actions of forcible entry and detainer or detainer only, an appeal from the judgment of said court may only be taken to- the circuit court, in the maimer provided by the Justice Code.”
The municipal -courts were given jurisdiction over -causes, some of which were triable in the circuit court, and some of which were triable before a justice o-f the peace. Section 7 of this statute, for the purpose of appeals, divides the causes triable before the municipal courts into two classes: (1) Those not cognizable before a justice of the pea'ce, but which might have been triable in' the circuit court; and (2) those'triable before a justice of the peace. The language of this section -that “all appeals from judgments and orders” clearly refers to the first class of causes or those that might have been tried in the circuit court, and has no applicability to- the second class, or those that might have -been tried before a- justice of the peace. Appeals of the second class are taken to the circuit court in the manner 'provided by the Justice Code. Under the provisions of the Justice -Code, appeals from intermediate or interlocutory orders are not permissible, but any intermediate order affecting the judgment may be reviewed only on an appeal from the judgment. Section 106, Justice Code'. If is quite evident that the legislative mind had' in view these provisions of the Justice -Code, -when the word “judgment” was alone -used in relation to appeals to the circuit court in those causes cognizable before a justice of the peace. The. only method for reviewing on appeal any intermediate order affecting -the judgment in that class of causes, if the cause had been tried before a justice of the peace, is under and by virtue of an appeal from the judgment. It would hardly be supposed that the Legislature intended to split up the procedure of a single cause of action and permit an appeal direct to the Supreme Court from an intermediate order, where the *355Judgment itself, in the same cause, could only be appealed to the circuit court. We express- no opinion upon the merits of the regularity of the procedure in- the municipal- court sought to be reviewed on the appeal.
The motion to dismiss the appeal may be granted.
POELEY, J., not sitting.