On February 25, 1963, pursuant to Section
At the hearing on March 26, 1963, the petitioners were represented by counsel, as was the board of trustees, and evidence was presented. Subsequently, on March 30, 1963, at a meeting of the board, it was determined that the allegations of the petition were not established in several material respects, and further proceedings for incorporation under the statute were denied.
The petitioners filed a notice of appeal to the Court of Common Pleas of Summit County with the clerk of the township, and, in the course of events, the appeal came on for hearing in the Court of Common Pleas, where additional evidence was taken. At the conclusion of this hearing, the court ordered "that the findings and facts and conclusions of law of the Trustees of Twinsburg Township be and hereby are reversed and this cause is remanded to the Trustees of Twinsburg Township and they are ordered to set a date for an election and an election is ordered in conformance with Revised Code 707.16 * * *."
Thereupon the Board of Trustees of Twinsburg Township filed its notice of appeal from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas to the Court of Appeals.
The following assignments of error are here urged:
1. "The Common Pleas Court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter of the appeal of Petitioners for Incorporation of a Village to be known as Twinsburg Heights Village * * *."
2. "Assuming that the Common Pleas Court had appellate jurisdiction of the subject matter of petitioners' appeal, the Common Pleas Court erred in finding that the petitioners * * * had complied with the provisions of Chapter 707, Ohio Revised Code, enabling the incorporation of a village out of a portion of a township."
The statute authorizing a petition to the township trustees *173
for the incorporation of a village, Section
"When the inhabitants of any territory or portion thereof desire that such territory be incorporated into a village, they shall make application, by petition, to the board of township trustees of the township in which the territory is located * * *. Such petition shall:
"(A) Be signed by not less than ten per cent of the persons seized of freehold estates and in any event not less than thirty such persons, residing within the proposed corporate limits of the village and addressed to the township trustees;
"(B) Be accompanied by an accurate map of the territory;
"(C) Contain, in addition to the matter required by Section
[Section
"(A) An accurate description of the territory embraced within the proposed municipal corporation, and it may contain adjacent territory not laid off into lots;
"(B) The supposed number of inhabitants residing in such territory;
"(C) The name proposed;
"(D) The name of a person to act as agent for the petitioners. More than one agent may be named in such petition."]
"(D) Include a statement that the population density within the proposed corporation is in excess of three hundred persons per square mile;
"(E) Include a statement that the per capita valuation of real, public utility, and tangible personal property, as the same is shown on the tax list and duplicate, within the proposed corporation limits of the village, is in excess of one thousand dollars."
The procedure provided by statute, Section 707.16, Revised Code (since amended), at the time of the presentation of the *174 petition, gave to the trustees certain duties and obligations. In pertinent parts, the statute read:
"When the board of township trustees receives the petition provided for in Section
With these statutes in mind, we look first to the challenge of the right of the Court of Common Pleas to entertain the appeal of the petitioners from the order of the board of township trustees. It is obvious from the record that the appeal was taken under the claimed authority of Section
"Every final order, adjudication, or decision of any officer, tribunal, authority, board, bureau, commission, department or other division of any political subdivision of the state may be reviewed by the Common Pleas Court of the county in which the principal office of the political subdivision is located, as provided in Sections
"The appeal provided in Sections
"A `final order, adjudication, or decision' does not include any order from which an appeal is granted by rule, ordinance, or statute to a higher administrative authority and a right to a hearing on such appeal is provided; any order which does not *175 constitute a determination of the rights, duties, privileges, benefits, or legal relationships of a specified person; nor any order issued preliminary to or as a result of a criminal proceeding."
The trustees claim, in contesting the right of the petitioners to appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, that Chapter 2506 of the Revised Code "contemplates appellate review of decisions of officers only of divisions of political subdivisions of the state. * * * The board of township trustees not being a division of a political subdivision of the state of Ohio, its decision concerning the subject of this appeal is not reviewable under favor of Chapter 2506. * * * The act of the board of township trustees was not a judicial function, but rather a political or legislative act."
Section
"The General Assembly shall provide by general law for the election of such township officers as may be necessary. * * *"
The General Assembly has said, Section
This court, in the unreported case of Petitioners forIncorporation v. Board of Springfield Township Trustees (No. 5448, Court of Appeals for Summit County [motion to certify the record overruled by the Supreme Court of Ohio, October 7, 1964]), ruled that the board of trustees of a township is an agency of a political subdivision of the state within the meaning of Section
We do not agree with the claim that the action taken by the board of trustees in denying the petition was a "political or legislative act," and, therefore, not appealable under the authority of Remy v. Kimes,
We hold, therefore, that the Court of Common Pleas had jurisdiction of the subject matter of the appeal of the petitioners for incorporation of a village to be known as Twinsburg Heights village.
Having determined the right of the Court of Common Pleas to exercise its jurisdiction upon the appeal of the petitioners for incorporation, who were, indeed, specified persons within the meaning of Section
It is established law that if no party entitled to appeal is before the appellate court, the court is without jurisdiction, and the question being jurisdictional, it may be raised at any time, even by the court itself. See: 4 American Jurisprudence 2d 684, Section 172.
By virtue of Section
Township trustees possess only the powers that are expressly conferred upon them by statute or which are, by necessary implication, requisite to perform the duties imposed upon them. They are empowered, in certain instances, to act in a judicial, as well as a ministerial, capacity. 52 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 295, Section 42.
Under the provisions of Section 707.16, Revised Code, supra, the board of trustees is given judicial authority. It cannot give consideration to the merits of the petition as a legislative body might do, but is confined to the duty of granting the petition and ordering an election if the allegations of the petition meet the full command of the statute, and it has been established by evidence that the allegations of the petition are true.
In an appeal, by an aggrieved person, from a decision of a board of township trustees on a petition for incorporation of a village, neither the board, nor its members, become a party to the appeal. The powers of the board are specified explicitly in Section 707.16, Revised Code, supra. Paraphrasing the language of Taft, J., in the case of A. DiCillo Sons, Inc., v. ChesterZoning Board of Appeals,
In conclusion, we hold that the appeal to this court should be dismissed for the reason that the Board of Twinsburg Township Trustees is not a litigant in the action, and is not in law prejudiced by the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas. *178
In dismissing this appeal, we are by no means saying that in all instances a board of township trustees is denied the right to appeal. The writer of this opinion, as a practicing lawyer, argued and won the right of appeal of township trustees before the Supreme Court of Ohio, in the case of Gearhart v. Richardson,
The appeal will be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
BRENNEMAN and HUNSICKER, JJ., concur.
