37 Ind. App. 32 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
Appellees sued appellant board of commissioners as sole defendant to recover the proceeds of certain bonds sold by such board to appellees and which were subsequently declared illegal. On November 2, 1905, a judgment was rendered against appellant board of commissioners alone. Afterwards, Herman C. Rogers filed a motion to correct the record to show the previous filing of a verified petition by certain taxpayers asking the appointment of
Afterwards, November 24, 1905, “comes now H. C. Rogers, as per order nunc pro tunc, and refiles his petition of taxpayers of Newton county, which verified petition reads as follows.” This petition is signed by Pierce Archibald, A. D. Peck and four others, is verified, and states, in substance: We, citizen taxpayers of Newton county, Indiana, show the court that, in the suit brought by J. E. Wild & Co. against Newton county, they believe and have good reasons to believe that said county commissioners and the special counsel employed by said board of commissioners will not make a good and sufficient defense in said suit, and that unless the taxpayers of Newton county are otherwise represented said suit will be lost to the county and to the taxpayers. Now, we, on our own behalf and on behalf of other taxpayers, most respectfully ask the court to appoint Rogers to represent the taxpayers in this action,
The only attempted hill of exceptions is as follows: “John E. Wild et al. v. Board of Commissioners of the County of Newton. Come now the defendants, taxpayers, by H. C. Rogers, their attorney, and file their hill of exceptions reading as follows:” [The bill reciting the filing of the petition by taxpayers as above set out, the order of the court thereon, and the entry nunc pro tunc.]
The transcript was filed in this court December 1, 1905. On December 13, 1905, William Cummings, the county attorney of Newton county, filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, and with the motion filed a certified transcript of an. order of the hoard made concerning the appeal. This transcript is signed by the county auditor and under the seal of the hoard. The order of the board, after reciting the recovery of the judgment and the hoard’s belief that the judgment is just and should not he appealed from and that the county should not he put to further expense in contesting the claim, states: “Whereas it appears from the record in which said judgment was rendered that said' hoard of commissioners prayed and was granted an appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court of Indiana; and whereas such prayer for an appeal was unauthorized by this hoard; now, therefore, this hoard orders that no appeal he taken from said judgment either to the Supreme or the Appellate Courts of Indiana; and it is further ordered that if a transcript for such appeal he filed in either of said courts, William Cummings, the county attorney of said Newton county, he and is hereby directed to appear in said court in which such transcript may he filed on behalf of this board, and to dismiss such appeal.”
The petition by the taxpayers did not ask that they he made parties to the suit, nor was any such request made at any time, nor does it appear that they were at any time
Section 644 Burns 1901, §632 R. S. 1881, provides: “Appeals may be taken * * * by either party, from all final judgments,” except in certain cases. This section can not be construed to authorize an appeal by a party who is not only not a party to the final judgment, but who never was at any time a party to the suit. It is true the taxpayers were interested in the suit, but the record does not disclose that they were made parties to the suit. Their interest as taxpayers is not shown to be different from that of taxpayers in every action brought against a municipal corporation. The county is known in law only by its board of commissioners, and acts, as a county, through its board. If it should be conceded that it might be proper or necessary in a given case for taxpayers to intercede and assume and control the defense of an action against the county, it could not be claimed that such was the case in this action. In this case, appellant was sole defendant in the’trial court, was the sole judgment defendant, and has the right absolutely to control the appeal.
Appeal dismissed.