Through proceedings which are not in issue so far as this appeal is concerned, the County Board of Education of Fremont County amended a previously submitted plan of county reorganization. Thereupon the plaintiff, one of the districts affected by the plan and the amendments, appealed to the District Court of Fremont County, alleging certain errors in the procedures in .granting the petition and the amendments. *1326 The County Board and the Superintendent of Schools, in his official capacity and as 'Secretary of the Board, were the only defendants named in the appeal. They filed a special appearance, raising two basic questions: 1, the County Board, hereinafter referred to as the Board, and County Superintendent are not proper or necessary parties or real parties in interest in the appeal; and 2, the petitioners, or proponents for the establishment of the district, and the school districts affected by the petition and the decision thereupon, other than the plaintiff, are necessary and indispensable parties to the appeal; and so no proper and timely appeal from the decision of the Board has been taken. The trial court sustained the special appearance, and we have this appeal.
I. In the special appearance, three districts other than the plaintiff are named as being affected by the ruling of the Board. The special appearance is not verified, and we have no way of knowing whether its allegation as to the other districts is true; nor do we think this is a matter of which the court can take judicial notice. In our view of the case, however, whether there are other affected districts is not material and we give the matter no further attention. In passing*, it may be noted that one other district, the Community District of Farragut and its Board of Directors, attempted to intervene and filed a special appearance, raising substantially the same questions. It alleged it is one of the districts affected. This special appearance was overruled, and no appeal has been taken. No further reference will be made to it.
II. The special appearance attempts to raise important questions as to the proper parties to an appeal to the courts from a decision of the County Board of Education when the entire territory affected lies within the same county. But the method of raising them is challenged; and since we agree that special appearance is not a proper method of bringing them before the courts, we do not reach them. It is suggested in argument that some of the matters suggested and relied upon by the defendants and the trial court will require evidence to establish. For instance, we do not know how many districts, if any, other than the plaintiff and the intervening district, may be affected. The special appearance names others; but in this respect it is di
*1327
rectly analogous to a “speaking” demurrer, and we can give it no consideration. Bales v. Iowa State Highway Commission,
III. The claim that the defendants are not proper parties to the appeal may be shortly dismissed. It is not contended that they are not properly named in the petition, or that a proper and timely notice was not served upon them. This being so, their argument at this point is sufficiently answered by the statement that if they are not proper parties and so no cause of action is stated against them, they may raise the point by motion to dismiss, or answer, or perhaps in other ways. The question goes to the merits of the controversy, rather than to the jurisdiction. Harvey v. Prall,
IV. The function of a special appearance is discussed and defined in State ex rel. Cairy v. Iowa Co-Operative Association,
Since there is no claim of lack of service of a proper notice upon the defendants, their case must rest upon some asserted want of jurisdiction of the subject matter. In State ex rel. Cairy, supra, we set out the rules which determine this question. We there cited authorities, including 14 Am. Jur., Courts, section 160, pages 363, 364; Collins v. Powell,
Y. It would be possible to close this opinion with a statement of the rules set forth in the preceding division. However, this might be thought to be a lack of consideration of the position of the defendants and to fly in the face of some of the authorities cited by them. One of these is In re Redistricting of School Districts,
Thus, in Routh v. Board of County Comrs.,
Likewise, in Commonwealth v. Deford Co.,
Similar language was used by the New Hampshire Supreme Court when it said in Boston & Maine Railroad v. State, 77 N. H. 437, 438,
In DeFlumeri v. Sunderland,
We ourselves have held substantially the same. In Howell School Board District v. Hubbartt,
The reasoning of these cases seems sound beyond fair debate. We must for the purposes of jurisdiction, and of procedure and pleading, except where the statute specifically outlines these matters, view this “appeal” as merely an original proceeding in the district court to determine the rights of the parties and the legality of the actions of the administrative body. No specific procedures are outlined except for the time of taking the appeal. We held in Board of Directors of Lewis Consolidated Sch. Dist. (Cass County) v. Board of Education (Cass
*1330
County),
If the appeal herein is not a true appeal, but merely the institution of an original proceeding, as we have held, the matter of procedure and pleading falls within the Rules of Civil Procedure in the absence of any other direction by the statutes. Rule 25(c) says: “If an indispensable party is not before the court, it shall order him brought in. When persons are not before the court who, although not indispensable, ought to be parties if complete relief is to be accorded between those already parties, and when necessary jurisdiction can be obtained by service of original notice in any manner provided by these rules or by statute, the court shall order their names added as parties and original notice served upon them. * * *.” City of Cedar Rapids v. Cox,
This being an original proceeding in the district court, the ordinary rules of civil procedure, including pleadings and including rules 25 and 368, supra, must apply, except as different rules therefor are provided by the statutes giving the right of appeal; and such statutes supersede the rules only to the extent that they do provide specifically for different procedures. The issues are by no means so specifically formulated in the ease of appeals from one-county boards as from joint boards. In any event, they make no provision for bringing in indispensable parties, and so we must turn to the Rules of Civil Procedure for our guidance on this point, in particular rule 25.
*1331 The proper procedure for the trial court, if it found there were necessary parties not before it, was to follow the command of rule 25 above and to order them brought in. It had jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants and of the subject matter of the action. The cause is reversed and remanded for further proceedings in harmony with this opinion. — Reversed and remanded.
