This аppeal is from a judgment of $31.00 rendered in favor of appellee and against appellant in an action brought by appellee to recover for services performed for the appellant in wеighing corn for him at an alleged agreed рrice of two dollars per day.
This is a civil action, brought for the enforcement of private rights, and our statutory law governing appeals provides, among other things, as follоws: “No appeal shall hereafter bе taken to the Supreme Court or Appellate Court in any civil case where the amount in the controversy, exclusive of interest and costs, does not exceed fifty dollars ($50.00) except as provided in section eight of this act.” Sec. 4-211, Burns Ind. Stat. Ann. 1933. The exceptiоns reserved by said section eight of the act (Sec. 4-213, Burns Ind. Stat. Ann. 1933) are as follows: “Every casе in which there is in question, and such question is duly presеnted, either the *221 validity of a franchise, or thе validity of an ordinance of a municipаl corporation or the constitutionаlity of a statute, state or federal, or thе proper construction of a statute, or rights guaranteed by the state or federal constitution, and which case would be othеrwise unappealable by virtue of section six, or section seven shall be appealable directly to the Supreme Cоurt, for the purpose of presenting such quеstion only.”
It is settled in this state that there is no vested right of appeal, and that such right is the subject of legislative discretion to be given or withhеld as the legislature sees fit.
Collins
v.
Laybold
(1914),
Appellee filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for various reasons, but the question of jurisdiction is not raised in the motion. This court, howеver, must take notice of its lack of jurisdiction, whether the question is raised or not.
Essington
v.
Bowman
(1919),
