On the 7th day of November, 1911, the board of trustees of the town of Thomas filed a petition before the board of county commissioners of Custer county, praying for the annexation of certain contiguous territory to the town. On December 12, 1911, the Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company, through their attorneys, filed an objection to the jurisdiction of the board of county commissioners, alleging that no notice had been given by the petitioners as required by law. The plaintiffs in error also appeared by their attorneys and moved a dismissal of the proceedings upon the same grounds. On the 12th day of December, 1911, the board of county commissioners sustained *Page 226 the motions to dismiss, and the board of trustees of the town of Thomas appealed from this action of the county commissioners to the superior court of Custer county. When this cause came on to be heard in the superior court, as far as the record shows, the Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company made no appearance. The other remonstrators appeared and filed several motions attacking the jurisdiction of the court upon various grounds, which it will not be necessary to set out here, all of these motions being overruled by the court. On the 15th day of March, 1912, a trial was had in the superior court before a jury which returned a verdict against the remonstrators, and a judgment was accordingly entered in conformity therewith. In due time the remonstrators other than the said railway company filed a motion for a new hearing, which was overruled, and they have brought the case here by petition in error and case-made.
The appellee herein has moved to dismiss this appeal for the reason that the Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company has not been made a party to this appeal.
The case-made was not served on said railway company, and neither was it served with summons in error, and it has not joined in the appeal, nor waived service. The record in the case shows that the right of way of the said railway company runs through the territory desired to be annexed to the town of Thomas, and the depot was in this same territory, and if a reversal of the judgment of the trial court would in any way affect the interest of the said railway company, then the motion to dismiss should be sustained. It is apparent at once that its interest will be materially affected. As it made no further protest before the board of county commissioners other than to file the motion to dismiss, and did not *Page 227 defend in the superior court, it might be that it concluded that it would be to its best interest to be annexed to the town in order to have the benefit of the police protection of the town and street improvements, etc. On the contrary, its interest would be affected by being thus annexed to the town, in that its property would be taxed for the support of the municipal government, and it might be subject to possible police regulations by the town as to running its trains, etc. The judgment entered by the trial court was a joint judgment against all of the parties in the territory which the town authorities asked to be annexed to the town and included the Kansas City, Mexico Orient Railway Company, and if the said railway company would not consent to join in the appeal, then it should have been made a defendant in error, and served with the case-made and summons in error. It has become the well-settled law of this state that all parties against whom a joint judgment has been rendered, and whose interest will be affected by the reversal of the judgment on appeal, must be made parties to a proceeding in error to review such judgment, and a failure to join any one of them, either as plaintiff or defendants, is grounds for dismissal of the cause. UnitedStates Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. Ballard, 44 Okla. 807,145 P. 396; Michael v. Isom, 43 Okla. 708, 143 P. 1053; Syfertv. Murphy, 45 Okla. 137, 144 P. 1022; Vaught v. Miners' Bank,27 Okla. 100, 111 P. 214; Burns v. Toney, 27 Okla. 728,117 P. 209; Price v. Covington, 29 Okla. 854, 119 P. 626; Bankv. Mergenthaler, 31 Okla. 533, 122 P. 507; John v.Paullin, 24 Okla. 642, 104 P. 365.
The plaintiffs in error, in opposition to the motion to dismiss the appeal, advance the proposition that the proceeding to annex territory to a town is, in a manner, *Page 228 ex parte and also in rem, and, that being so, that there are no "necessary parties," the law giving to any one interested the individual right to appear and protest, should they so desire, against the annexation. No authorities have been cited to support this contention, and we have been unable to find any ourselves after a long search.
We do not draw the distinction interposed by plaintiffs in error, and are unable to differentiate this kind of case from those which require service of the case-made and summons in error on all parties to a joint judgment who refuse to join in the appeal if their interests will be affected by a reversal of the judgment on appeal.
For these reasons, the appeal should be dismissed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.