Chapterfifty-six of the municipal code, under which this proceeding was had, provides for the annexation of adjacent territory to a municipal corporation, on the petition of the corporation, and directs that “upon such petition being presented to the commissioners, like proceedings thereon shall be had, in all respects, so far as applicable, as are required under the provisions of chapter fifty-five.” Chapter fifty five provides for the annexation of such territory on petition of the inhabitants residing thereon, and directs “ that the same proceedings shall be had thereon, and the same duties in respect thereto shall be performed by the commissioners and other officers, as are required in the case of application to be organized into an incorporated village under the provision of chapter two ” of said code. Substantially, therefore, the case is governed by the provisions of chapter 2 of the municipal code (66 Ohio L. 150). The petition of the plaintiffs was filed, as it is claimed, under the provisions of section 20 of this chapter, which provides:
“ That any person interested may, at any time within sixty days from the day of filing said transcript of the commissioners and papers with the recorder as before provided, make application by petition to the court of common pleas of the county, or the judge thereof if in vacation, setting forth in such petition the errors complained of, or the inaccuracy of said boundaries, or both, and praying an injunction restraining said recorder from making the said record and certifying the transcripts above required.”
We think the petition was filed under a misapprehension of the true meaning of this section. It is only for “ ei’rors,” or for inaccuracy of description, that the injunction can be allowed. The petition sets forth no errors in the proceeding, nor does it allege any inaccuracy of description. It is not denied that the proceeding — the petition for annexation, the map, the notice of the time and place of hearing, and the hearing itself — were in strict conformity to the provisions of the statute. The case made in the plaintiffs’ petition is simply, that under all the circumstances, “ it is not *565l’igbt and proper” that the annexation should be made. Whether it is “right and proper” that the annexation should be made is the very' question which the act (sec. 14) submits to the “ discretion ” of the commissioners, without any provision for an appeal from their decision. What the plaintiffs in fact seek is to appeal from the decision of the commissioners. They seek to retry the case on its merits, instead of reviewing it for errors or irregularities. The latter, as we understand the statute, is all that it permits. The decision of the commissioners on the merits of the ease,is final. The proceeding allowed by section 20 is not in the nature of a bill in chancery, or of a civil action, but is a mere summary proceeding for the correction of errors and irregularities, and we suppose that no appeal from the decision of the judge or court allowing or refusing the injunction lies to the district court, and that the proper judgment there would have been a dismissal of the appeal.
We see no error .in the proceeding to the prejudice of the plaintiffs.
, - Motion overruled.