The opinion of the court was delivered by
Milton, J.:This action was brought to obtain a perpetual injunction to prevent the defendants in error from filling up and destroying a passageway and removing a trestle bridge from the right of way of the. railroad where it passed through the plaintiff’s land, such right of way having been conveyed by the plaintiff and his wife to the defendant, the Chicago, Kansas & Western Railway Company by a deed of warranty which contained no reservation, and which expressed a consideration of $650. The plaintiff claimed that as *619a further consideration it was orally agreed between the agent of the grantee and the plaintiff, prior to and at the time the deed was executed, that the plaintiff should have the perpetual right of user of the passageway under the trestle between the several portions of his land. The defendants alleged the payment of a cash consideration of $650 for the right of way, and that if its agent made the agreement as claimed by the plaintiff such agent acted without authority, and that his act had never been ratified by the defendants. Upon the filing of the petition a temporary injunction was granted.
At the trial of the case it was ordered that the temporary injunction be dissolved. The petition in error was filed within thirty days after the order of dissolution was entered and the temporary injunction remains in force. The value of the alleged easement cannot be ascertained from the record.
This case comes from the supreme court, which in January, 1899, made an order for its transfer. Our jurisdiction in the premises is challenged by a motion to dismiss. In considering the grounds of the motion we have been led to conclude that we are without jurisdiction over the proceedings in error. Section 9 of chapter 96, Laws of 1895 (Gen. Stat. 1897, ch. 84, §23; Gen. Stat. 1899, §1864), which defines and limits the jurisdiction of the courts of appeals, was construed by the supreme court in the case of McPherson v. The State, ex rel., 56 Kan. 139, 42 Pac. 374. In the opinion it was said :
“ Giving to the words used in this section the same construction given to section 1, chapter 245, of the Laws of 1889, it must be held that the courts of appeals take jurisdiction of cases under the provision quoted only when there is amount or value in controversy which does not exceed $2000.”
*620In the syllabus, referring to the same section of the statute, it is said :
“ That clause in said section which gives the courts of appeals jurisdiction where the amount or value does not exceed $2000, exclusive of interest and costs, includes only actions where there is an amount, or something having a money value, in controversy.”
The construction thus placed on said section 9 was followed by the court of appeals for the northern department in the case of Stevens v. Moore, 4 Kan. App. 757, 46 Pac. 1011, wherein a part of the opinion reads :
“The courts of appeals have jurisdiction to review an order or judgment of the district court or the judge thereof only where the amount or value does not exceed $2000, exclusive of interest and costs. Jurisdiction is thus limited to a particular class of civil actions —such only as involves controversies having a money value. It necessarily embraces only such cases as are for the recovery of money, or that concern property or property rights which have a money value. The stat-. ute furnishes no criterion other than the amount or value in controversy by which the appellate jurisdiction of this court in civil actions may be determined.”
In view of the foregoing the case must be transferred to the supreme court, and it is so ordered.