Dissenting Opinion.
Bermudez, C. J.The judgment complained of is, to all intents and purposes, a final judgment. It is not one of dismissal or of non-suit, *767wliicli can cause no irreparable injury. It is based on an irregular proceeding, 3 R. 641, a rule to strike out certain parts of tbe reconventional demand. It rests on the main allegation of that rule, which sets-up res judicata, and it can itself become res judicata, as it determines an issue. Unless appealed from within the time fixed by' law, it would* be impossible for this Court to afford relief to the relator, and this inability may entail an irreparable injury. 6 L. 427; 15 L. 521. It is signed, as final judgments are required to be.
, This Court has lately held, that an appeal lies from a judgment striking out part of the allegations and prayer of a petition, although such judgment was merely one of dismissal. State on relation of Ikerd vs. Delauney, No. 8724. .
The correctness of the ruling of the District Judge is not before us presently, and cannot be inquired into. The very object of the appeal sought is to have that correctness tested in a proper form.
The relator is entitled to try his reconventional demand in conjunction with plaintiff’s demand. A severance might defeat his rights, and thus inflict irreparable injury.
If the effect of the judgment complained of cannot be arrested, the consequence would be, that the trial of the case would proceed below on the record, mutilated as it is, and the defendant could not recover on the allegation stricken out. In the event of a judgment for plaintiff, he could not practically satisfy it by a recovery on his claim, if founded in reality. Were the judgment complained of reversed, the case would necessarily have to be remanded for a new trial, if not of its entire merits, at least, of those portions which were expunged from the reconventional demand.
To all appearances the reconventional demand is intimately connected with the main action, from which it is alleged to grow. If so, there is no reason why it should not be passed upon simultaneously. 31 An. 170.
The appeal asked can wrong no one. Its effect would be to leave matters in the condition in which they stood before the judgment striking out was rendered; a different, appeal would not serve the purpose efficiently.
The argument is unsound, that the judgment is equivalent only to a ruling in the course of the trial, rejecting evidence on objection of the plea of res juclieata. Such a ruling would not be an interlocutory judgment, still less a final judgment. It could cause no irreparable injury. It would not impress itself on the record. To leave any trace, it would have to be incorporated into a bill of exception.
*768The ruling in the case of Harris vs. Stockett, upon which the opinion of the majority rests, lacks .similarity in material respects.
■ The Court there dismissed an appeal taken from a decree eliminating averments from a reconventional demand,-for want of proper parties'. The Court said properly, that if it was an interlocutory decree, it could cause no irreparable injury, and if it was not such, but a final judgment, it was unsigned.
In either case it could not be appealed from'. It was truly so. The-decree could cause no injury, because it passed, on no issue of merit, susceptible of becoming res judicata..
■ The decision in that case rests on the ruling in Fields vs. Gagné, 33 An. 340, which is a mere repetition of the doctrine as previously, announced, and which is to the effect, that where an interlocutory decree is of such a nature as to be covered by an appeal from the final' judgment, and if the appellate court can restore the parties without-the loss of any right to the identical position occupied before the decree was rendez-ed, the injury is not- irreparable, and the right of appeal does not lie.
•So that, as concerns interlocutory decrees, it is settled that no appeal lies when two conditions concur: 1st, that the decree can be covered-by the appeal on the merits; and 2d, that the appellate court can reinstate the status in quo.
- The judgment, from which an appeal is sought, is not an interlocutory decree. It is a final judgment, signed and treated as such, as final' judgments are signed. Even if it were an interlocutory decree, it is riot susceptible of being covered by an appeal from the jizdgment on the-merits, and the Court could zrot restore the- status in quo, because the judgment became res judicata. ■ ;
■ This Court has lately held in a majority opinion, (Tin-ley vs. Drey-: fus) that a mere decree, overruling an exception of no cause of action, was a judgment constituting res judicata, which had so passed beyond-reach that by its judgment on the Iiierits it could not revise it.
The indisputable principle -is, that all -judgments can be appealed suspensvvely in appealable cases, whether interlocutory or final; the5 former whenever susceptible of causing ah irreparable injury, the latter without1 qualification. - - -
The exceptional cases in which final judgments canzzot be suspended are enumerated. ■
The judgment complained of has the substance and form of a formal judgment and is not ernbraced within the excepted class:
I think that the relator is entitled to the relief sought. ' • ■