H. L. B’Shers was county judge of Hempstead County in 1914, and during that year built a large number of bridges in that county. A number of these bridges were furnished by the Hope Bridge Company, and that company filed for allowance the following claim against the county:
“May 18/14 One 60-ft. bridge by Cros- .........................................................................$ 568.50 noe
May 23/14 One 30-ft. bridge shipped to Ozan ..................................................................... 216.00
May 23/14 One 20-ft. bridge shipped to Ozan ..................................................................... 91.84
May 28/14 One 300-ft. bridge, $216.00, with legs, $44.00 260.00 x off
June 18/14 One 17-ft. legs $44.00 .................. 6-ineh,. $81.20, 125.20 x off
June 29/14 One 60-foot, $568.50, 20-ft., $91.84, legs, $23.25............................................. .$ 683.59
$1,945.13
Off 385.20
$1,559.93.”
Opposite the bridges for which the sums of $260.00 and $125.20, respectively, were charged, the county judge made the notation, “xoff.” These two bridges total the sum of $385.20, and that sum was deducted from the account, and- the docket of the judge showed that the claim was “allowed as amended,” and the following entry was-made on the county court record:
“This day the court examined the claim herein filed of Hope Bridge Company for one 60-foot bridge, one 30-foot bridge, 2 20-foot bridges, and one 60-foot bridge, which is duly verified and allowed by the court as amended in the sum of fifteen hundred fifty-nine and 93/100 dollars ($1,559.93) and the clerk of this court is ordered to draw his warrant on the county treasurer for the said sum in favor of said firm payable out of the appropriations for bridges.”
No further action was taken in regard to this claim until after the expiration of the term of Judge B’Shers. Later another account was filed, which included these two items, and they were disallowed by the county court, and in apt time an appeal was prosecuted from the order of disallowance to the circuit court, and upon a trial there judgment was rendered in favor of the bridge company.
A motion was filed in behalf of the county to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that the claim had been disallowed at the July, 1914, term of the county court, and no appeal had been prosecuted within the time limited by law. This motion was not disposed of specifically, but the judgment of the court, in effect, disposed of it.
There appears to be no question but that the bridges were furnished to, and were received by, the county, and were in use at the time of the trial. The controlling question is whether the claims were disallowed by the county court at its July, 1914, term.
It is first insisted that this issue should have been tried on appeal before a jury. But a jury could not have been demanded in the county court originally, and it was not proper, therefore, to submit the case to a jury in the circuit court on appeal. State v. Johnson, 26 Ark. 281; Swope v. Boss, 29 Ark. 370; Govan v. Jackson, 32 Ark. 553; Williams v. Citizens, 40 Ark. 290; Wheat v. Smith, 50 Ark. 266; Woolum v. Kelton, 52 Ark. 445; State v. Churchill, 48 Ark. 426, 436; Kirkland v. State, 72 Ark. 171, 177; St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. State, 99 Ark. 1, 16. Moreover, the record recites that the cause was heard by the court by consent of the parties.
Upon the hearing of the cause it was shown that the county judge had the practice, when examining accounts against the county which consisted of ,a number of items, to allow those items about which he was satisfied, and to pass over, for further examination, items about which he was in doubt; and Judge B’Shers testified that he had not disallowed the items in question, but had marked them off for further investigation.
It is insisted that the judgment speaks for itself, and that it is not subject to parol explanation. The judgment, however, does not disallow the items in question. It does allow the account as amended, and parol evidence was admissible to show what the account as amended was, and this was done by showing the meaning of the marginal notations made upon the account by the county judge. The notations are ambiguous, and no rule of evidence was violated in explaining this ambiguity. This explanation makes it appear that, when considered by the county court, the items had been marked off the account, and the account as passed upon by the court was one for the sum of $1,559.93, for which sum it was allowed.
We perceive no reason why the court did not have the jurisdiction to pass upon these items separately and to allow or to disallow them separately, as they represented different bridges furnished at different times. Jennings v. Fort Smith District of Sebastian County, 115 Ark. 130.
Tbe court amended tbe account so that it included only tbe items concerning wbicb it was then advised and upon wbicb it was tben prepared to pass judgment, and we are of tbe opinion that tbis action cannot be treated as a judgment of disallowance from wbicb an appeal must be prosecuted. Under tbe circumstances an appeal would bave been both premature and unnecessary.
Judgment affirmed.