On the 15th day of July, 1892, the Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to a bill filed by the appellants against the appellees and dismissed the bill. The appellants then prayed an appeal to the Supreme Court, Avhich Avas alloAved.
On the 12th day of September folloAving, another judge of the Circuit Court, on motion of the appellants, and the unsAvorn statement of the minute clerk that he made a mistake, and that the order alloAving the appeal should have shoAvn an appeal to this court, entered this : “ On motion of complainants it, is ordered that the order entered herein on the- 15th day of July, 1892, alloAA’ing an appeal to said complainants to the Supreme Court of the State of Illinois, be and the same is hereby amended so as to alloAV said appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District of Illinois. And it is further ordered that this order be entered nunc pro tune as of July 15th, 1892.”
We need only refer to Frew v. Danforth, 126 Ill. 242, In re Barnes, 27 Ill. App. 151, and Ettelson v. Jacobs, 40 Ill. App. 427.
The appeal is dismissed on motion of the appellees.
Appeal dismissed.
( TIpon petition for rehecuring, opinion filed Janua/ry 21,1893.)
Mr. Justice Gary.On the 7th of FTovember last, the appeal in this case was dismissed on the ground that the allowance of an appeal to the Supreme Court did not bring a case here. The only question then considered was the power of the Circuit Court to change the order allowing the appeal at a later term of the court.
The appeal bond recited an appeal to this court, and the record was filed here. The appellants now move to reinstate the appeal, contending that the appeal, however prayed and allowed, goes to the court to which by law the jurisdiction belongs. For this position they cite Benjamin v. Liverpool, 15 Ad. & El. N. S. 1070; Queen v. Buckinghamshire, 4 El. & Bl. 260, in note; and Stone v. Cromie, 87 Ky. 173. These cases are in point, but we decline to follow them.
Under our statutes the decisions have been uniform that no appeals were effectual unless the terms upon which they were granted were complied with.
The appellee has no other notice of an appeal than the order allowing it, unless, indeed, in looking to see whether the appeal was perfected, he should read the recitals in the bond, and thereby discover that the appellant had gone to another court. Generally that would not be done, and so it might happen that a just judgment might be reversed upon an ex parte showing, without actual or cpnstructive notice to the party interested in sustaining it.
As no appeal is to be dismissed for insufficiency of the bond, if the appellant will give a good one, (Sec. 70, Chap. 110 R. S.), the step we are asked to take leads to the position that an appeal taken to one court, with bond reciting such an appeal, and the record filed in another, is to be followed by the appellee to the latter court, if the appeal should have been to it, though he never had any notice that any record had been filed anywhere. The motion is denied.
Motion denied.