Aрpellee, in November, 1898, as the surveyor of Whitley county, made allotments, under the statute, for the purpose of cleaning out and keeping in repair certain portions of a public ditch known as the “Mud run” or Gearin ditch, which had bеen previously established and constructed in the counties of Allen and Whitley. The portion of the ditch allotted by the surveyor to appellant railroad company was in number of feet 5,500. From this decision of the surveyor appеllant appealed to the Whitley Circuit Court, from which the cause was subsequently venued to the Kosciusko Circuit Court, wherein, upon a trial had, the court reduced the allotment of 5,500 feet, as made by the surveyor to appellant, tо 4,500 feet. The 1,000 feet deducted by the court from appellant’s original allotment was by the court added to the allotment apportioned to Union township, of Whitley county, and the township’s allotment, as made by the surveyor, was therеby increased 1,000 feet. The court thereupon ordered and adjudged that the allotments so made should stand, and they were in all respects ratified and confirmed by the court. From this judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal, and seeks a reversal thereof for numerous alleged errors of the trial court.
The provisions of the statute relating to and authorizing allotments of a public ditch to be made by the county surv
At the very threshold we are confronted with a question in respect to our jurisdiсtion in this appeal. The county surveyor, under the statute, in making the ditch allotments simply acts in an administrative capacity, and, were it not for the express provision of the statute granting an appeal to the circuit or superior court by any person aggrieved by his order, no appeal therefrom could be taken. Ellis v. Steuben Co.,
In re Mayor, etc.,
An act of the legislature of the state of Connecticut provided that “the board of councilmen for the city of South Norwalk shall be the final judges of the election returns and of the validity of elections and qualifications of its own members.” In Selleck v. Common Council, etc.,
In People v. FitzGerald,
Coon v. Mason County,
A statute was enacted by our legislature in 1861 providing that in a proceeding before a board of commissioners to obtain a license to sell intoxicаting liquors an appeal from the order of the board might be taken to the circuit or common pleas court, and further provided that the decision or verdict of the jury in the latter court “shall be final and conclusive, and without aрpeal therefrom.”
In the case of Board, etc. v. Lease,
In Brown v. Porter,
The fact that the statute of 1861, in addition to the phrase “final and conclusive”, contained the words “and without appeal therefrom” is not of importance, as these words were simply a repetition of, or rather served to make more evident, that which was declared by the immediately preceding words “final and conclusive.”
The case of Grusenmeyer v. City of Logansport,
It follows, and we so conclude, that the appeal in the case at bar is prohibited by the statute in controversy; hence we have no power to entertain the same, and therefore are constrained to dismiss it on our own motion, for want of jurisdiction.
Appeal dismissed.
