The petitionee moved to dismiss, for that, among other things, the selectmen had not at. the time of the bringing of the petition neglected and refused to lay out and cause to be surveyed a highway, as therein alleged. Both *118pai'ties produced witnesses on that question ; but the court, failing to agree, did not dispose of it, but proceeded to adjudge that the petitioners were entitled to the appointment of commissioners as matter of right. This is manifest error. No matter whether a motion to dismiss was a proper way to raise the question or not, the parties proceeded to try it as raised, and it was the duty of the court to decide it; for it was a jurisdictional question, and if found for the petitionee it would have been a sufficient cause for refusing to appoint commissioners. Crawford v. Rutland, 52 Vt. 412.
Another ground for dismissal set up in the motion was, that within five years from the time this petition was brought two other petitions had been brought, asking for the laying of a highway over substantially the same location, and that commissioners had been appointed thereon, whose reports in each case, adverse to the laying of the highway, had been accepted by the court. Both pai'ties produced witnesses on this question also; but the court, failing to agree, preter-mitted it, like the other, and proceeded to adjudge as before stated. This part of the motion is based upon No. 18 of the Acts of 1890, which amends R. L. 2,945, by adding thereto that it shall be a sufficient cause for the county court in its discretion, to deny the appointment of commissioners and dismiss the petition when, within the time aforesaid, two prior petitions had been brought for the purpose and disposed of in the manner aforesaid. This act took effect on November 17, 1890. The'petition in this case was brought on November 20, 1890, and the petition to the selectmen was preferred on November 8, 1890. On November 26, 1890, the legislature declared that no act of the General Assembly shall affect any suit begun or pending at the time of its passage, with certain exceptions not necessary to be stated. Acts of 1890, No. 31. The question, therefore, arises, whether the statute pleaded in the motion can affect this case, seeing that the petition to the selectmen was brought *119before its passage ; and that depends upon whether that proceeding was a “suit” within the meaning of the statute.
The rule adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States in respect of the removal of suits from the State courts to the Federal courts is, that a proceeding not in a court of justice, but carried on by executive officers in the exercise of their proper functions, as in the valuation of property for the just distribution of taxes or assessments, is purely administrative in its character, and cannot, in any just sense, be called a suit; and that an appeal in such a case to a board of assessors or commissioners having no jurisdictional powers, and authorized to determine only questions of quantity, proportion and value, is not a suit; but that such an appeal becomes a suit if made to a court or tribunal having power to determine questions of law and fact, either-with or without a jury, and there are parties litigant to contest the case on the one side and the other. Upshur County v. Rich, 135 U. S. 467, 477. In Calderwood v. Calderwood’s Estate, 38 Vt. 171, it was held that a proceeding before commissioners appointed by the probate court to receive, examine, and adjust claims and demands against the estate, was a suit within the meaning of a statute declaring that a prior statute relating to the" competency of witnesses should not affect a suit brought or pending on the day it went into effect.
Now, although a board of selectmen cannot properly be called a court when acting upon any matter, and may not possess so many attributes of a court as do commissioners on the estates of deceased persons, who are officers of the court that appoints them, and whose proceedings are really the proceedings of that court, much as the proceedings before auditors, referees, and masters are proceedings before the court appointing them, yet, in laying out, altering and discontinuing highways, the functions of selectmen are more than administrative ; they are largely judicial, and they pro*120ceed much after the manner of judicial bodies, for application must be made to them in writing ; they áre required to appoint a time for examining the premises and hearing the parties, and to give notice thereof to the petitioners and the persons owning or interested in the land through which the highway may pass, and of the .time when they will consider claims for land damages. After examining the premises and hearing the parties, they are to judge whether the public good or the necessity or convenience of individuals requires the highway to be laid out as claimed by the petition, and if they judge that it does, they are to lay it out accordingly, cause it to be surveyed, fix the time within which the own erof lands taken shall remove his buildings, fences and timber, and award land damages. If a land owner is dissatisfied with the laying out of the highway as well as with the compensation for his damages, he may apply by petition in writing to the county court, and any number of persons aggrieved may join in the petition ; and when the selectmen do riot lay out the highway, any three freeholders of the town or vicinity may apply therefor by petition in writing to the county court. Thus, application to the selectmen and their action thereon are a prerequisite to an application to the county court, which is in effect an appeal to that court from the action of the-selectmen, and that court has only appellate jurisdiction, and is confined to the same matter that the selectmen acted upon, and so the proceedings in the county court are but a continuation of the proceedings before the selectmen. - French v. Holt,53 Vt. 364; Crawford v. Rutland, 52 Vt. 412. We think, therefore, that it comes within the spirit of the act of November 26, 1890, to hold that the word “suit” as therein used, embraces proceedings before selectmen for laying out highways, and hence, that this case cannot be affected by the statute pleaded in the motion, as it was passed pending the proceedings before the selectmen.
*121Whether the court might not properly, in its discretion, without that statute, regard the subject-matter of the motion in this respect as constituting sufficient cause for denying the appointment of commissioners and dismissing the petition, as intimated in Ferguson v. Sheffield, 52 Vt. 77, we express no opinion.
Judgment reversed, with costs to the -petitionee in this court, and cause remanded.