RANDOLPH, Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. Before the Court today on certiorari review is an appeal by the City of Cleveland ("the City") of a judgment of the DeSoto County Chancery Court denying the City's motion for attorney fees. We find that, after the Court of Appeals rendered the underlying case and this Court denied certiorari review, the case was at its end. The chancery court did not thereafter have jurisdiction. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the DeSoto County Chancery Court finding that it did not have jurisdiction. As the jurisdictional issue is dispositive, we decline to address the chancery court's alternative holding to deny the City's motion for attorney fees, and we vacate the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
¶ 2. In 2006, Mid-South applied to the Department of Health ("DOH") for a certificate of need, and the City intervened in
¶ 3. Six days later, the City filed a motion in the DeSoto County Chancery Court seeking attorney fees and costs, citing as its basis Mississippi Code Section 41-7-201(2)(f). The chancellor denied the motion, finding that it lacked jurisdiction and, alternatively, that the City was not entitled to attorney fees under Mississippi Code Section 41-7-201(2)(f). The City appealed again. We assigned the appeal of that order to the Mississippi Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals affirmed the chancery court's denial, relying on the chancery court's alternative basis that Mississippi Code Section 41-7-201(2)(f) did not provide for attorney fees, but failed to address the jurisdictional issue. See Miss.Code Ann. § 41-7-201(2) (Rev. 2009).
¶ 4. We find that the chancery court lacked jurisdiction to grant the City's motion for attorney fees, which was filed after the case ended. Upon the City's appeal of the chancery court's judgment, the chancery court lost jurisdiction. Corporate Mgmt., Inc. v. Greene County, 23 So.3d 454, 460 (Miss.2009) ("Filing a notice of appeal transfers jurisdiction from the trial court to an appellate court."). And because the Court of Appeals rendered judgment in the underlying case, as opposed to remanding, the chancery court did not regain jurisdiction.
We fully agree with the chancellor's finding that, because the case was rendered — not remanded — the chancery court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate and award attorney fees.
¶ 5. This Court provided more than a century ago that after "[a] final decree had been entered in this court,
¶ 6. All issues that had been raised, or could have been raised, were terminated when the Court of Appeals rendered the case and this Court denied certiorari review. In its original filings in chancery court (Mid-South's original appeal from the DOH decision), the City failed specifically to seek attorney fees. On appeal from the chancery court's reversal of the DOH order, the City failed to request that the Court of Appeals reverse the chancery court's judgment and remand to the chancery court to allow it to seek its claim for attorney fees. To the contrary, the City specifically asked the Court of Appeals to reverse and render. It was only after the Court of Appeals reversed and rendered that the City first sought attorney fees in the chancery court. We find no error in the chancery court's judgment that it was without jurisdiction.
¶ 7. Finding that the chancery court correctly determined that it had no jurisdiction, we find it unnecessary to address the chancellor's alternative basis. Thus, the Court of Appeals likewise was without jurisdiction to consider the alternative basis. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the DeSoto County Chancery Court, and vacate the opinion of the Court of Appeals.
¶ 8.
WALLER, C.J., CARLSON AND DICKINSON, P.JJ., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE AND KING, JJ., CONCUR.