12 Wash. 446 | Wash. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
J.— As stated in the brief of appellant, the only question for discussion and determination in this case is, will an appeal lie from a decision or order of the board of county commissioners with respect to the removal of the county seat.
The respondent is a resident and taxpayer of Snohomish county and, as such, undertook to prosecute an appeal from an order of the board of county commissioners of that county, declaring the result of an election to remove the county seat, and from an order requiring the removal of the county offices to the place designated by the board. The superior court dismissed the appeal on motion oí the defendants, on the ground that the resolution and order complained of were not appealable. In so doing the appellant contends the court erred. He insists that he had an unquestionable right to appeal, under the act of March 11,1893 (Laws 1893, p. 291), which provides that “ any
“A literal construction of this part of our statute would compel us to hold that any man or woman in the county or state, or elsewhere, may appeal . . . regardless of his or her relation to the matter in controversy, and we do not think the legislature intended, for a moment, to confer such an unlimited and universal right of appeal. It is a generally understood proposition of law, and presumably within the knowledge of the legislature when they enacted this section, that no one but a party to an action or proceeding can prosecute an appeal from a judgment or decision therein. Hayne, New Trial and Appeal, Ch. 31. And we must presume that when the legislature said ‘ any person may appeal/ they meant any person who has properly presented a matter before the board for their determination, and who is dissatisfied with their decision.”
This whole statute must be read together in order to ascertain the legislative intention, and when so read it will be manifest that it was only intended to give the right of appeal to parties to ordinary proceedings before the board, or to persons directly interested therein. The words “party appealing” are used several times in that portion of the act prescribing the manner of taking the appeal, which strongly tends to show that it was the intention that the person who appeals must be, in some way, a party to the matter in controversy.
The right of appeal is a statutory right, and not having been given by the statute in this instance, we are of the opinion that it was the intention of the legislature that there should be no appeal from the proceedings of the board of county commissioners in the matter of the removal of a county seat. And the same doctrine has been announced by other courts in cases like this and in others involving similar questions. Bosley v. Ackelmire, 39 Ind. 536; Board of Com’rs v. Smith, 40 Ind. 61; Ex parte Towles, 48 Tex. 413; Bowersox v. Watson, 20 Ohio St. 496; Fulkerson v. Stevens, 31 Kan. 125 (1 Pac. 261).
The judgment is affirmed.
Hoyt, O. J., and Dunbar, Scott and Gordon, JJ., . concur.