
    Emma Rimmer v. The O’Brien-Green Company.
    
      Filed at Ottawa January 19, 1897.
    
    Appeals and errors—Appellate Court’s judgment is jmal in mechanic’s lien suits involving less than $1000. The rule that in proceedings to foreclose a mortgage where the amount involved is less than $1000 the judgment of the Appellate Court is final, in the absence of a certificate of importance, applies to proceedings to enforce a mechanic’s lien.
    
      Bimmer v. O’Brien-Green Co. 64 Ill. App. 104, dismissed.
    Appeal from the Appellate Court for the First District;—heard in that court on appeal from the Superior Court of Cook county; the Hon. John Barton Payne, Judge, presiding.
    Farson & Greenfield, for appellant.
    Levi Sprague, for appellee. '
   Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

This was a proceeding commenced in the Superior Court of Cook county to enforce a mechanic’s lien. Upon a hearing in the Superior Court the petitioner obtained a decree for $417.90, and interest from January 1, 1893. To reverse that decree Emma Rimmer appealed to the Appellate Court, where the judgment of the Superior Court was affirmed as to the $417.90 but reversed as to the allowance of interest, and she has appealed to this court.

This being a proceeding to collect a debt, and the amount involved being less than $1000, the judgment of the Appellate Court was final, and no appeal will lie from that judgment to this court unless the Appellate Court has granted a certificate of importance as provided for in the statute, which was not done. We have held in a number of cases that on a bill to foreclose a mortgage, where the amount involved is less than $1000, the judgment of the Appellate Court is final. (Akin v. Cassiday, 105 Ill. 22; Sedgwick v. Johnson, 107 id. 385.) The same principle governing these cases in regard to an appeal must apply to a proceeding to enforce a mechanic’s lien.

The appeal will be dismissed.

Appeal dismi8sed.  