Certain owners of real estate in White County presented a petition to the county court for the creation and establishment of a road improvement district pursuant to the terms of Act No. 338 of the General Assembly of 1915. Descriptions of the road to be constructed, and of the region to be included within the, boundaries of the district, were set forth in the petition, and a plat of the proposed district and r’oute of the road was also filed with the petition. A considerable number of owners of real property, which would have been affected by the creation of the district, filed a counter petition protesting against the establishment of the district. The county court heard the ¡matter upon the petition and counter petition and made an order creating and establishing the district in accordance with the prayer of the original petition. Two of the landowners, who were among those who remonstrated against the creation of the district, took an appeal to the circuit court. They filed the affidavit and bond prescribed by tbe statute. Tbe matter was heard by tbe circuit court upon tbe petition and counter petition and upon oral testimony, and tbe court found that tbe original petition did not contain tbe signatures of a majority of the owners of land in tbe district, and also found that it was not to tbe best interest of tbe county, or tbe landowners within tbe proposed district to establish tbe district, and denied tbe prayer of tbe petition. Judgment was rendered by tbe court that said district “be not established as a road improvement district in and for White County, Arkansas.” Tbe case is brought here for review on tbe appeal of tbe original petitioners.
(1) The case may be disposed of by following tbe decision of this court in tbe recent case of Lumberson v. Collins, 123 Ark. 205, the record failing to show that tbe terms of tbe statute were complied with in respect to procuring and filing with tbe county court a survey of tbe road and maps, plans, specifications and estimates made by tbe engineer of tbe State Highway Commission.
(2) In addition to that, tbe judgment must be affirmed for tbe reason that tbe evidence was sufficient to support tbe finding of tbe circuit court that the petition was not signed by a majority of the owners of land within tbe proposed district, and that it was not to tbe best interests of tbe county and of tbe landowners to establish tbe district. Tbe evidence on those subjects is conflicting, and there being sufficient to support the finding of tbe circuit judge it is our duty not to disturb it. Jacks Bayou Drainage District v. St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 116 Ark. 30. The statute makes tbe establishment of the district depend upon a finding by tbe court that “tbe petition is signed by * either a majority in land value, acreage or in number of landowners within tbe proposed district,” and that tbe establishment of tbe district'be found to be “to 'the best interests of tbe county and landowners in said district. ’ ’
It is insisted, finally, that tbe court erred in adjudging that tbe district be not established, and that inasmuch as only two of the property owners appealed from the order of the county court creating the district, the judgment of the circuit court should have been limited to granting relief only to those two appellants by excluding their lands from the district. The contention is based upon the peculiar language of the statute regulating appeals from an order of the county court establishing a district. That part of the statute reads as follows:
“Any owner of real property within the district may appeal from said judgment within thirty days by filing an affidavit for appeal, stating in said affidavit the special matter on which said appeal is taken, and any owner of real property may likewise appeal from the order of the county court refusing to establish said district or eliminating any territory therefrom.
“No appeal shall delay the proceedings for carrying out the proposed improvement after the order of the county court establishing same is made, and any party not appealing within the time herein prescribed shall be deemed to have waived any objections he may have to said order, and to have relinquished all rights he may have had to question the same.” *
(3-4) The argument is that the order of the county court establishing the district is, to follow the exact language of the statute, “deemed conclusive, final and binding upon all territory embraced in said district,” and that notwithstanding an appeal by a portion of the landowners the establishment of the district remains in full force and continues to exist as to all property owners who do not appeal and successfully maintain their objections. The purpose of the statute was, we think, to prevent a temporary suspension of the judgment of the county court establishing the district, pending the appeal to higher courts. It would not do to say that the Legislature meant that the district should continue in full operation notwithstanding the fact that the organization had been declared invalid at the instance of a number of property owners. Such a construction as that would impose the burden of taxation for the construction of the improvement upon only a portion of the lands in the district. In other words, some of the owners of land would be allowed to escape taxation by successfully prosecuting their protest against the organization of the district, while others who were less aggressive might have to sustain the increased burden. Certainly no such impossible situation as that was intended to be created by the Legislature. The appeal does not, under the terms of the statute, suspend the judgment of the county court creating the district, but when it is found at the instance of the protesting property owners that the organization is invalid, it is -the duty of the circuit court on appeal to so declare. The appeal itself does not suspend the judgment creating the district, and proceedings may be continued thereunder pending the appeal, but when a final judgment is rendered on appeal declaring the district not to have been duly organized, then that stops the whole proceeding the same as if it had been so adjudged by the county court.
Counsel for appellants rely, as sustaining the contrary view upon a decision of the Supreme Court of Indiana in the case of Stipp v. Claman, 123 Ind. 532, 24 N. E. 131. But we do not consider that decision in point, for the only question involved was whether or not an appeal from an order creating an improvement district operated as a suspension of the judgment. The contention in that case was that, regardless of the final outcome of the appeal, the proceedings had while it was pending were void because the judgment creating the district had been suspended, and the Supreme Court held against that contention. The effect of our statute undoubtedly is to prevent a temporary suspension of the proceedings pending an appeal, and unless the appeal be successful in obtaining a final judgment of the appellate court against the establishment of the district, proceedings taken while the appeal is pending are valid.
Judgment affirmed.
Section 3, Act 338, p. 1406, Acts of 1915. (Rep.)