DELIVERED THE OPIHIOH OE THE COURT.
The only question in this case is, whether, the appeal from the order of the county court establishing a private passway is required by law to be prosecuted within sixty days from the time of such order.
By section 43, article 1, chapter 94, General Statutes, it is provided that a party aggrieved may prosecute an appeal from an order of the county court concerning the establishment, alteration, or discontinuance of a road, within one year to the circuit court. And by section 10, article 2, same chapter, it is provided that the law regulating appeals in road cases shall apply to and govern proceedings concerning pass ways.
But by section 3 of an act of the general assembly, entitled “An act to regulate the appellate jurisdiction of the courts of this commonwealth,” approved May 5, 1880, it is provided that appeals shall be to the circuit court from all orders and judgments of the county court in cases of bastardy, and of certain other subjects of county court jurisdiction therein mentioned, but not, however, including roads and passways. And by section 5 of the act it is provided, that the manner and time of taking appeals shall be as provided in the Civil Code of Practice.
*386Though there is no express provision in the Civil Code concerning appeals from judgments and orders of county courts, it was manifestly intended by the legislature that section 729, Civil Code, should govern in respect to cases mentioned in the act, which section provides that appeals taken pursuant to chapter 2, title xo, shall be prosecuted within sixty days from the rendering of the judgment.
The decision of the question, therefore, depends upon whether section 43, article 1, and section 10, article 2, chapter 94, General Statutes, have been repealed by the act of May S, 1880.
From the time of the repeal of the former Civil Code until the passage of the act of May 5, 1880, there was no law expressly regulating the time of taking appeals from orders and judgments of county courts in the cases mentioned in section 3 of the act, and the object of its passage was to supply the omission.
But the time <for prosecuting such appeals in cases of roads and passways being already regulated by chapter 94, General Statutes, no provision was made in the act of 1880 in regard thereto, the obvious purpose of the legislature being to leave the law unaltered as to them.
In our opinion, therefore, the sections of chapter 94, General Statutes, mentioned, are not in conflict with, or repealed by, the act in question; and the lower court erred in dismissing the appeal upon the ground it was not prosecuted within sixty days from the time of the order establishing the pass way.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.