156 Ind. 325 | Ind. | 1900
It appears from the. record that appellants and 100 others, freeholders, citizens of Hamilton township, in Jackson county, Indiana, filed a petition before the board of commissioners of said county at their December term, 1897, for the improvement of certain roads in said township described in the petition, under the provisions of the act of 1893 (Acts 1893, pp. 196-200) as amended by the act of 1895 (Acts 1895, pp. 143-148), being §§6924-6934 Burns 1984, §§6924, 6925, 6928, 6929, 6930-, 6933 Burps Supp. 1897,- §§5114ccc-5114mmm Horner 1897. At the said December term of said board of commissioners' Sewell and others, sixty freeholders, citizens of said township, also filed, a petition for the improvement of the same- roads described in the petition signed by appellants, and also other roads in said township. The petition of Sewell and others was signed by,two persons who were signers of the other petition, and the petition' of Sewell and others asked the improvement of roads the length of which ¡was'about twenty miles more than the roads described in the other, petition. The board of commissioners on their own motion ordered the two proceedings consolidated, and made a finding that each complied with the requirements of the statuté and was signed’by more than fifty freeholders, citizens of the said township, and appointed an engineer and viewers to perform the duties required by said act and the amendments thereof as to the roads described, and report at the March term,
The causes assigned for a new trial are “that the decision of the court is contrary to-law” and “that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient évidence.”
■ The finding of the court was clearly contrary to ■ law. Every fact necessary to entitle appellants to Have the question ef the improvement of the roads described in their petition submitted to the voters of said township was clearly shown by the evidence without' any conflict.
It is insisted, however, that the judgment of the board of commissioners appealed from was only an interlocutory order, and not a-final judgment, and that appellants had no right to appeal'therefrom, and the appeal should have been dismissed by the trial court for that reason, and that therefore appellants cannot complain of the finding and judgment Of the trial court, which, if erroneous, was harmless, because a correct result was reached. And, further, that' the board
It is suggested by counsel for appellee that the special election ordered by the board was held at the time fixed, and that a majority of the votes cast were for the building of the roads described in the petition of Sewell and others, which included all the roads described in appellants’ petition, and that- the board of commissioners are proceeding with the construction of said roads, and that therefore there is no’ merit' in- the appeal.. No question concerning the effect' of -such facts on the appeal is presented-by a mere suggestion or statement in appellee’s brief. There is a proper and legal way to present such facts to this court, and only when they are presented in that manner can this court' determine their effect, if any, on the appeal.
No pleading was filed, nor was' any evidence given at the ■ trial in the court below concerning said election, or that the result was as suggested, and we aré -not called upon to decide, ■
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellants’ motion for á new trial, and for further proceedings not inconsistent'"with this opinion. '