77 Mo. App. 254 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
In July, 1895, plaintiffs instituted this proceeding before the township board of Medicine township, Livingston county, to open a public road over the land of the defendants. The latter objected and filed a remonstrance. From a judgment of the township board ordering the road opened, the defendants appealed to the Livingston county court. When
The circuit court sustained this last motion, dismissed defendants’ appeal from the county court, and entered a final judgment against defendants for costs. Erom this judgment defendants have appealed.
Both sides concede the proposition that when this road proceeding was begun in October, 1895, and in fact during the entire progress of the case, ,¶ , i • i i • i the township boards, in counties under township organization, had no jurisdiction . ÍT m such road matters. It seems that prior to the act of the legislature, approved March 23, 1893 (Laws 1893, p. 222), the establishing and opening new roads was vested in such township boards — of course in such counties only where there was township or ganization; in other counties such
The dismissal of defendants’ appeal was in effect an adjudication that they had no cause or right to appeal from the judgment against them. But defendants had, unquestionably, the right of appeal — first from the judgment of the township board and subsequently from the judgment of the county court. Plaintiffs’ counsel insist, that as the whole proceeding before the township board and the county court was without jurisdiction, there was no judgment from which an appeal would lie — that said judgment was a nullity, etc. While it is true that a judgment was entered against defendants without authority and without legal sanction, and was therefore void, yet defendants had the right by appeal
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.