It appears, from the record in this case, that Culpepper and others applied to the county commissioners of Fulton county to alter an old road in that county, as provided by section 604 of the code. Upon the petition being filed, an order was issued by the county commissioners to three road commissioners to make a report, as required by said section. The report was made, recommending a discontinuance of a portion of the old road, provided the property owners on the east side should open a street not less than thirty-five feet wide through their property, so that the owners of land on the old road could have direct access to Péachtree street. ’ Notice was also given to the parties in interest, as required by the code.
The case coming on to be heard, testimony was introduced by the applicants and by the objectors. Among other things introduced by the objectors, was an amended report of the road commissioners, stating that, upon reflection and after consultation with others, they recommended that the old road be not altered or any part of it discontinued. After hearing the evidence in the case, the county commissioners rendered the following judgment:
“ That said road should be discontinued from Poplar street south of its junction with new Peachtree street; provided the petitioner, J. W. Culpepper, would give forty feet off his land, and in line with Poplar street, so as to extend said Poplar street to said new Peach-tree street.”
To this judgment the objectors excepted, and filed their certiorari to the superior court, which writ was sanctioned by the judge. Upon the hearing of the writ of certiorari in the superior court, the judge dismissed the same and *794affirmed the judgment of the county commissioners; to which ruling of the judge the objectors filed their bill of exceptions, and assigned as error, among other grounds, that “ it was not competent for said commissioners, under the law, to make said change, except upon the same being marked out and returned under oath by the road commissioners to whom the matter was referred, in accordance with the code.”
We think the court erred in dismissing the certiorari. Under the code, whenever a new road is to be.established or an old one to be altered, the county commissioners must appoint three road commissioners to report whether they find it of public utility ; and if so, they must mark-it out and make their report under oath to such commissioners. In this case, the only legal report made to the county commissioners was one simply to discontinue the old road. There was no report made by them recommending the utility of the road, or that they had marked it out in accordance with law. It is perhaps true that the county commissioners are not bound to follow the recommendation of the road commissioners, but may in their judgment adopt a different scheme or plan from that reported by the commissioners. If they should adopt another plan and alter an old road, in their judgment or order altering the same, they should provide that the new road or new part of the road should be marked out, so that it might go upon the records of the county and show by their order where the new road should run.
In this case, the county commissioners did not adopt the report of the commissioners altogether, nor did they provide in Iheir order or judgment that the metes and bounds and length of the road should be marked out. Nor did the report of the road commissioners say that they had marked it out according to law. The judgment rendered by the county commissioners was a conditional judgment, that the road should be altered, provided Culpepper would give forty feet of his land in line with Poplar street. It *795did. not'even specify in what time Culpepper was to signify his acceptance of the condition of the judgment. So it depends altogether on the will of Culpepper whether the road shall be altered or not., and not upon the judgment rendered by the county commissioners. If Culpepper should refuse to give forty feet of his land, then the legal effect of that judgment would be that the road would not be altered. If he should give forty feet of his land, then there is no record showing the metes and bounds of said road.
For these reasons, we think the court erred in dismissing the certiorari, and we therefore reverse the judgment.
Judgment reversed.