51 Miss. 731 | Miss. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court.
§ 1383 of the Code is as follows: “ Any person who may conceive himself aggrieved by any judgment or decision of the board of supervisors, may appeal to the next term of the circuit court of the county, and may embody the facts and evidence in a bill of exceptions, which shall be signed by the president of tlie board;
Under the last section the plaintiff in error was employed by the board of supervisors of the county of Marion to perform some duty for which he presented his bill to the board for allowance. For some cause the board rejected his claim, thereupon, he pre
To a correct elucidation of the case at bar, a reference to prior statutes is necessary. Before the revision of 1857, the following was the law : “ Sec. 41. It shall and may be lawful for all persons who feel themselves aggrieved by the judgment of the board of police of any county, to appeal by bill of exceptions or certiorari to the circuit court of his county ; which appeal shall be taken during the term of the board at which judgment is entered, or at the next succeeding regular term thereof, and not after.”
“ In cases where appeals are prosecuted in the circuit courts, the president of the board of police shall defend the same; and all expenses and money paid by him shall be repaid by the proper county by order of the board of police.” How. & Hutch., 453.
This statute was considerably enlarged, and the practice in such cases is now fully defined by the revision of 1857. Code of 1857, p. 419, art. 33, 34. By the former law an appeal was authorized only from a “ judgment ” of the board of police. By the latter it was allowed from any “judgment or decision” of such board and the decision of the circuit court was thereby made “final.” Code of 1857, p. 419, art. 33.
The code of 1871 is a literal transcript of the code of 1857, with the exception that the judgment of the circuit court is not, in words, made final, the words, “ and the judgment of the circuit court shall be final,” used in the code of 1857 (p. 419, art. 33), being omitted from the code of 1871.
These changes must be considered material and significant of the intention of the law makers. By the code of 1857, the judgment of the circuit court in such case was final, by express terms. This finality was too distinct to have been omitted from the present code, except by design, and from an intention to open to litigants in these cases, the benefit of a writ of error with us,- a writ of right.
The judgment is reversed and remanded to be disposed of on its merits.