O'Boyle v. Shannon
This text of 80 Ind. 159 (O'Boyle v. Shannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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— On the 2d day of December, 1872, the board of commissioners of the county of Vigo, in regular session, made and entered of record an order selling to Patrick Shannon certain stock in the Evansville and Crawfordsville Railroad Company, owned and held by Vigo county, for the sum of $17,000, and appointing John E. Martin attorney in fact, for the county to transfer the stock on the books of the railroad company to the said Shannon.
On the 9th day of the same month, John H. O’Boyle, the appellant, filed an affidavit and an appeal bond with the auditor of Vigo county and prayed an appeal from the order of the board of commissioners, made and entered as above stated, to the Vigo Circuit Court, which was granted by the auditor. At the April term, 1873, of the Vigo Circuit Court, the venue was changed to the Vermillion Circuit Court, where there was a trial upon the merits, resulting in a finding and judgment setting aside the sale of the stock to Shannon. Upon an appeal to this court, that judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Shannon v. O’Boyle, 51 Ind. 565. After the cause was remanded to the court below, Shannon, the appellee, moved to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that no appeal was allowed by law from such an order as that set forth as above. This motion was sustained and the appeal was dismissed.
The only error assigned is upon the decision of the court dismissing the appeal.
When this cause was here before it was held that the commissioners of Vigo county had power to sell the stock in controversy, and that the exercise of that power was a matter which rested in their discretion; that their power to make such a sale was implied from the nature of their organization and from the general powers conferred upon them by statute; that their power in respect to such a sale was one which could not be controlled by a superior tribunal so long as it was exercised in good faith. Dillon Mun. Corp., section 396; Sims v. The Board, etc., 39 Ind. 40; Bosley v. Ackelmire, 39 Ind. [161]*161536; Moffit v. The State, ex rel., 40 Ind. 217; The Board, etc., v. Richardson, 54 Ind. 153; The Baltimore, etc., R. R. Co. v. The Board, etc., 73 Ind. 213. See also The City of Fort Wayne v. Cody, 43 Ind. 197.
This discretionary power of county commissioners, over the property of their respective counties, has been held to be analogous to the legislative power possessed by many municipal bodies and is distinguishable from the judicial or quasi judicial powers conferred upon such commissioners. Hanna v. The Board, etc., 29 Ind. 170.
It follows, therefore, that the order of sale, from which an appeal was prayed in this case, was not a “ decision ” within the meaning of the statute authorizing appeals from the decisions of county commissioners in a large class of cases. 1 R. S. 1876, p. 357, section 31. Consequently, the court below did not err in dismissing the appeal in this cause.
As suggested by counsel, there is apparently some conflict between some of the cases ruled upon by this court bearing upon the general question of right of appeal from proceedings of boards of county commissioners, and we think the distinction recognized as above between that class of proceedings which may, and that which may not, be appealed from, has not always been observed as carefully as perhaps it might have been.
It may be that in some cases the right of appeal has been sustained where the proper remedy, if any, would have been by proceedings for an injunction.
As the commissioners of Vigo county would not in any event have been a proper party to this appeal, no part of the costs accruing in this court ought to be taxed against them.
The judgment is affirmed, at the costs of appellant O’Boyle.
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80 Ind. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oboyle-v-shannon-ind-1881.