The Chief Justicedelivered the opinion of the majority of the Court.
A question of jurisdiction forces itself on us in this case.
The Constitution, in directing the organization of this Court, provides that it shall have appellate jurisdiction only, unless in the cases excepted. Under the provision it has been adjudged that the Supreme Court cannot entertain jurisdiction in any case until final judgment has been rendered in the Court below. Nothing final has been done in this case from which an appeal can be taken. The Judge of the Circuit Court should have rendered judgment, subject to the opinion of the Court on the points reserved. This is the doctrine laid down in the cases, The State against Phleming and The State against Humphrey.(a) These cases were decided on due consideration, and, as a majority of the Court think, on sound principles of law, however strong reason may be against the restriction imposed by the constitution. It is the opinion of a majority of the Court that the case must be dismissed. ■
Judge Crenshaw.The Court ■ here refuse to entertain jurisdiction, because the Circuit Court did not decide the *267motion in arrest of judgment and pass sentence on the prí-soner. It is said, that to determine here a point reserved, but not adjudicated by the Circuit Court, would be the exercise of original and not of appellate jurisdiction. The Constitution of the State gives to this Court general late jurisdiction “ under such regulations and restrictions as may be prescribed by law.” By the Act of 1820, (Laws Ala. 482, s. 5,) “ It shall not hereafter be lawful for any “ Circuit Court to refer to the Supreme Court any question “ of law except such as may be novel and difficult, and “ arise in a criminal cause.” It is not denied by the majority of the Court, that a criminal case. may reach this tribunal on a point reserved by the Circuit Court. I think that to reserve a point or refer a question to the Supreme Court, necessarily implies that it has not been decided by the Circuit Court; for to me it appears a solecism, first to decide a question, and then to .reserve or refer it to another tribunal. But it is said, that to decide the question here without a previous adjudication by the Court below, would be the exercise of appellate, not original jurisdiction. What is original and what appellate jurisdiction ? Where a Court takes original cognizance of a cause, and is competent to decide on its merits, I understand it to be original jurisdiction. Our Circuit Courts have general original jurisdiction of ordinary actions and prosecutions at law, and of suits in Chancery. Appellate jurisdiction is where a case is brought into the Appellate Court from the Court of original jurisdiction, in which the merits of the case and matters of fact have been tried. It does not necessarily imply that on the verdict, or on the case as made out, judgment shall have been rendered by the Inferior Court, or that every question of law arising out of the case shall have been there decided. Chief Justice Marshall says, (1 Cro. 175,) it is the essential criterion of appellate jurisdiction, that “ it corrects and re- “ vises the proceedings in a cause already instituted, and “ does not create that cause strongly implying that it is not essential that final judgment should have been rendered, or the point reserved been decided by the Court below. The Constitution gives to the Legislature the power of regulating and restricting the appellate jurisdiction of this Court. In the exercise of this regulating and restricting power, the Legislature, by the Act referred to, have declared that a criminal cause may come into this Court on a question referred ; and I have, I think, already shewn that to refer or reserve a question, it ought not to have been decided by the Circuit Court. The Statute does not enlarge tho powers of the Appellate Court, or enable it to give ef« *268fect to its constitutional powers ; nor does it prescribo a mode by which its appellate powers in criminal cases shall be exer-cjse(jt But it restricts the authority to reserve a point and refer a question to the Supreme Court to criminal causes alone; an authority which, before this Statute, by the powers given by the Constitution, extended to civil as well as criminal cases. I cannot assent to the doctrine, that this Court cannot exercise its constitutional appellate jurisdiction, unless the Legislature have prescribed some mode or form by which it is to be exercised. The constitution gives to the Legislature the power of regulating and restraining this appellate jurisdiction, but has not denied to the Supreme Court, in cases where the Legislature may not interfere, the right to exercise its jurisdiction in any manner in which the Court may prescribe.
I do not conceive that this question of jurisdiction has been directly settled by any former adjudication of this Court. In Phleming against The State final judgment had been given, and sentence passed by the Circuit Court. The case of Humphrey against The State came up by appeal from the County Court, and not on any question referred to this Court. If this Court, in these cases, did incidentally say that novel and difficult points after rendition of judgment may be reserved for the consideration of the Supreme Court, and that this is the only mode in which a criminal case can be brought into this Court, the decision of this question was not necessary in order to dispose of either case. I do not feel bound by those decisions. I dissented from them, and shall avail myself of every opportunity to> protest against a doctrine which, in my opinion, tends to deprive the citizen of some of his most valuable rights.
Judge Crenshaw then gave his opinion that the .judgment should be arrested. As to this, the majority of the Court expressed no opinion.
Judges Saffold, Gayle, and Ellis, concurred with the Chief Justice, Judge Minor having presided on the trial in the Circuit Court, did not sit.
Ante, 42, 64.