7 Wash. 267 | Wash. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An application tó a court for the designation of a way of necessity, as a common law right, would be an equitable proceeding, and on an appeal in such a case, taken in April, 1893, the entire record must have been brought up, as in other equity cases. But the matter before us is not such an application, but rather a special proceeding to appropriate a ‘.‘private way of necessity” as the term is used in the constitution; in other words, it is a condemnation proceeding. In such cases no more of the record need be brought up than in ordinary civil actions. Code Proc., § 1423.
In this case there was no necessity for a bill of exceptions to be settled and signed. The only error assigned was upon the judgment of dismissal. The decision of the superior court was substantially the sustaining of a demurrer to the complaint, which was made apparent upon the record, and no exception was necessary. Code Proc., § 398. Moreover, an exception was noted and signed by the judge, being made a part of the order of dismissal.
The respondents’ motion to dismiss must, therefore, be denied. *
Appellant procured a lease of five acres of land, to be used as a stone quarry. This land lay along the south side of a sixty-acre tract of land belonging to a third party, through which ran the track of the Northern Pacific Bail-, road Company, several hundred feet away. Appellant
Dunbar, C. J., and Scott and Anders, JJ., concur.
Hoyt, J: — I concur in the result.