Opinion of the court by
Judge SettleAffirming.
Appelleees, following the giving of the required statutory notice, filed in the Fleming county court a petition to obtain the opening of a public road through their own lands and those of appellant and others. Commissioners appointed by the court viewed the route of the proposed new road and duly assessed the damages that would result from its establishment to the persons over whose laads it would run, and thereafter made a report to the court showing performance of. the duties required of them. Later an amended report was filed by them for the purpose of supplying certain omissions in the first report. The appellant, Jasper Story, being opposed to the opening of the road, filed numerous exceptions to the report of the commissioners. The issues of fact raised by the exceptions were tried in the county court by a jury resulting in a verdict sustaining the report, and the court thereupon entered judgment overruling .the exceptions, confirming the report, and establishing *119the road. Appellant, being dissatisfied with the judgment, prosecuted an appeal to the Fleming circuit court, and, the trial in that court having likewise resulted in a verdict in favor of appellees, appellant by the present appeal seeks a reversal of the judgment of the circuit court.
We will endeavor to pass upon such of appellant’s exceptions to the report of the proceedings as we regard material. His first objection is that the petition does not state the proposed new road is necessary for the convenience of the petitioners or others traveling to one of the several places mentioned in section 4888, Ky St., Section 4289, Ky. St., provides: “Ap; plications to have a new road opened or a former one changed or discontinued, or to have the privilege of erecting gates across any such road, shall be by petition to the county court signed by at least five lan.l owners of the county, which petition shall set forth, in writing, a description of the road, and what part thereof is to be altered or vacated. If for a new road, the names of the owners and tenants of lands, if known, and if not known it shall be so stated, over which the road is to pass, the points at or near which it is to commence, its general course, and the place at or near which it is to terminate, and if to erect gates the place proposed for that structure.” A reading of the petition will show that it. contains the signatures of five landowners of Fleming county, and sets forth every fact required by the section, supra, to be therein stated. This we think was sufficient, but if we were of opinion that the petition should have stated that the proposed road was required to enable the petitioners to travel to one of the places named in section 4288, and that the omission to state that fact in the petition made it defective, we should hold that the *120defect was one that appellant should have taken advantage of By demurrer. The report of the commissioners shows that the road will be necessary to enable the petitioners and others to reach several of the places to which it is permissible under section 4288 to open a public road, and, in addition, the fact is abundantly established by the evidence appearing in the record. The question of whether the opening of a proposed road is or not necessary is to be determined by the court from the record as a whole.
Appellants complain that the county court improperly allowed the commissioners to amend their report, and, in support of this contention, his counsel cites the case of Mitchell v. Bond, 11 Bush, 614. That case was decided when the “General Statutes” were in force, the provisions of 'which, with respect to the road law, were in many respects unlike those of the present law on the same subject contained in the Kentucky Statutes. Ford v. Collins, 108 Ky. 553, 56 S. W. 993, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 251; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Gerard (Ky.) 112 S. W. 915; 130 Ky. 18.
Under the present law the court has recognized the right of road commisiosners to amend their report and approved it as correct practice. Chamberlain v. Hignite, 97 S. W. 396, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 85.
We find no force in appellant’s complaint that the circuit court after the death of Allen Boyse, one of the petitioners, failed to enter an order of revivor, and refused him (appellant) a continuance of the ease for that purpose. The name of Boyse was one of six landowners appearing to the petition, and, as after his death there were still five landowners concurring in the application for the new road whose names *121remained to the petition, an order of revivor was unnecessary following the death of Boyse.
We do not think the county or circuit court erred in refusing to quash the commissioners’ report on appellant’s motion because it was written in the office of appellee’s attorneys. It does not clearly appear from the evidence by whom the report was written, but does appear that one of appellee’s attorneys at the request of the commissioners calculated and arrived at the quantity of land that would be taken from each landowner, for the proposed road. It is not, however, claimed nor did the evidence show, that the calculations of the attorney were in any respect incorrect, and if, as.there was some evidence to prove, it be conceded that the report of the commissioners was typewritten in the office and presence of the attorney and by his stenographer in the presence of the commissioners, that fact should not be held to invalidate the report, as it is not denied it was written by their direction or in conformity to their views, even though they may have received the assistance of the attorney in its preparation. Neither fraud nor undue influence on the part of the attorney with reference to the preparation of the report was alleged or proved, and its correctness was testified to by the commissioners and approved by two juries, one on the trial in the county and the other in the circuit court, who were permitted to view the entire route of the new road and the lands over which it ran before returning their verdicts.
Another of appellant’s complaints is that the county and circuit courts refused to quash the report because of the fact that the commissioners took luncheon with two of the petitioners during their work of viewing the route of the proposed road. This ruling *122of the court was not error. It does not appear from the evidence that the commissioners were improperly influenced by the hospitality of the petitioners, nor was it shown that they were talked to by the latter on the subject of the road while partaking of their hospitality. The commissioners were some distance from their own homes and not convenient 'to a hotel. Under the circumstances, and in the absence of testimony lending to show any improper conduct or conversation on the part of their hosts, we are unwilling to impugn the intelligence or condemn the work of the commissioners by assuming that they were influenced by the meal furnished them to make a report more favorable to the petitioners than was authorized by the law and facts.
Appellant further contends that the petition should have been dismissed because neither the petition nor the report of the commissioners indicates the width of the proposed road. The report of the commisisoners, like the petition, follows the statute. The report states the points of beginning and ending of the road to be opened, as well as the courses and distances thereof; and also the names of thé owners over whose lands- it will run. It does not, it is 'true, give the width of the road, nor does the statute defining the duties of the commissioners seem to require • that ■their report'shall indicate the width of the road. We find, however, that the width of’the road, 30 feet, is fixed by the order establishing it, which also makes the line of survey the center. This we think sufficient. In the case of Tingle v. Tingle, 12 Bush, 160, the report of the viewers was excepted to because it failed to give the metes and bounds óf the road to be opened. In overruling the exception the court said: “It.was also objected that the report was defective because *123it did not give 'the metes and bounds of the proposed change. The courses and distances are given, and the width of the road is fixed by the order establishing the alteration; but neither that order nor the report indicates on which side of the single line run and reported as the route the road is located; and the question arises, Is the running of a single line on the proposed route a substantial compliance with the statute which requires the report to describe the route laid out and reported by metes and bounds and by general courses and "distances ? * •* * We are not aware of any case in which a report of viewers has been held insufficient because the road was not bounded by two parallel lines on the opposite sides of the road, including it within those external lines, but upon a careful examination of the reported cases we are satisfied that it has heretofore been deemed a sufficient meeting and bounding of a próposed road to fix with certainty and distinctness the points of beginning, of termination, and the location of the road from one to the other of those points by a survey and fixing the width of the road, making the line of survey the center thereof.” According to the testimony of the commisis oners, the land of the appellant taken for the road is 30 feet in width, and he was allowed by the report for the quantity appropriated at the rate of $40 per acre.
Appellant insists that though the petition in this case seeks the establishment of a public road it is the purpose of the appellees and' the county court to convert it into a turnpike, which, it is claimed, cannot .legally be done without a proceeding to- condemn the light of way as and for a turnpike. We regard this contention unsound. The present road law was in. force when the Legislature on March 18, 1896, passed the free turnpike statute. Article 6, c. 129, Ky. St, *124By a vote under the latter law Fleming county made all turnpikes in the county free. Therefore all new pikes constructed are to be such roads as the statute declares them to be. Subsection 5, See. 4748b, provides that the fiscal court may acquire all turnpikes or gravel roads by gift, or lease, or purchase, and also provides for the construction of turnpikes or gravel roads when the public good demanded it. Subsection 6 declares: “All turnpikes and gravel roads thus acquired or constructed shall become public roads and shall be maintained by the fiscal court.” We quite agree with counsel for appellees that the Legislature, having already enacted a statute providing the manner of opening all public roads, and later enacting that all turnpikes hereafter constructed shall be public roads and maintained by the fiscal court as such, declined to confuse the public mind and incumber the statute with any re-enactment of a provision for the manner of opening turnpikes as distinguished from other public roads, and the fact that such provision is omitted from the free turnpike statute is conclusive that the Legislature regarded the public road statute ample for the purpose. As the converting of the road in controversy into a turnpike cannot increase or lessen appellant’s damages or put him to any additional cost,, and will give him a far better road through his premises than a dirt road, we are unable to see any good reason for. his opposition to the change.
Several of appellant’s exceptions based upon alleged insufficiency of the evidence we deem it unnecessary to consider, further than to say that the two juries regarded it sufficient to sustain the report of the commissioners and upon it and their own inspection of the route of-the proposed road based their verdicts. *125We have to do only with questions of law arising on the record, for section 4303, Ky. St. provides: “In all such eases the party aggrieved may prosecute an appeal within 60 days by executing bond as required in other cases to the circuit court of the county, and the appeal shall be tried de novo, and-from the decision of the circuit court either party may prosecute an appeal in the Court of Appeals, and the latter court shall have jurisdiction only of the matters of law arising on the record of such cases. ’ ’
Finally, appellant complains that the circuit court gave appellees judgment against him for costs. This was not error. Appellant, having refused to accept the damages allowed him by the report of the commissioners, and having failed to recover as much either in the county or circuit court he was not entitled to his costs and the circuit court properly so adjudged. As on the whole case the necessity for the road and its convenience to the traveling public seem to have been sufficiently established, and it is fairly apparent ihat the proceedings show a substantial compliance with the requirements of the statutes as to thé opening of public roads, no reason is perceived for disturbing the judgment.
Wherefore it is affirmed.