delivered the opinion of the court.
1. In the case of Oberbeck & Shaw v. Gallaway, 10 Mo. Rep. 364, this court held, that no appeal will lie from the order of a county court establishing or changing a road, unless some private right be affected by such order, and that no person can become a party to such proceeding, so as to be entitled to an appeal, unless his private rights are affected thereby.
A general appellate jurisdiction is given by statute, from the county to the Circuit Courts, but there is no provision describing the manner in which this jurisdiction shall be exercised. Cases may arise in which the want of such a provision may eause embarrassment, but as the one under consideration discloses, on the record itself, the irregularities complained of, there is no difficulty in affording the relief sought by this appeal. Doubts have been heretofore entertained in relation to the propriety of making counties parties to the proceeding, instead of the petitioners and remonstrants or objectors, but as the act of the 25th January, 1847, in relation to state roads, in matters of the assessment of damages, contemplates that the county may be a party; and as the act of March 3d, 1851, sec. 10, subjects the county to the payment of costs, where the *260objector obtains greater damages from the jury of householders than were awarded by the commissioners, we must suppose that the legislature intended that the counties should be parties to proceedings like those in this controversy. Without determining whether there may not be cases in which it would be improper to make the county a party, we are of opinion that this appeal is properly docketed.
2. The right to an appeal presented the only question of any difficulty in the case, for, on opening the record, a comedy of errors was apparent. The source of all the irregularities is the vagueness of the petition, in not stating under what section of the law the parties designed to proceed. From the language of the petition, one would be led to suppose that it was designed to obtain leave to turn a road, in order that the land through which it ran might be cultivated, under the 20th section of the first article of the act for opening and repairing roads and highways, approved March 26, 1845, for this section is not repealed by the act of 25th January, 1847. That act, it is obvious from its provisions, relates only to state roads, and it must be construed as affecting the sections of the second article of the act of 1845, and not those of the first article.
If the proceedings of the county court are to be regarded as taken under the 20th section of the first article of the act of 1845, they cannot be sustained, as they lose sight of that section in every particular. The court, under that section, had no right to turn the road on another’s land against his consent.
3. In opening new roads, the mode of assessing damages for injuries sustained by reason of their running through the land of individuals, is prescribed by the act of March 3d, 1851, secs. 7, 8, 9 and 10. It is not pretended that any of these provisions have been complied with, in the proceedings now before us. Indeed, it does not appear that the parties were aware of the existence of that act.
It is shown by the report of the commissioners, that Geyer did not consent that the road should run through his land. This fact appearing, the only way in which his land could be *261taken for public use, was by a strict compliance with the terms of the law. It was useless to enter into a controversy, whether he had entered an appearance, or had notice of the proceedings in court, and did not object to them. As his consent was wanting, the only mode by which his land could be condemned for a public road was, to take all the steps required by law, in case of a party not consenting that a road should be opened through his land.
The other judges concurring,the judgment of the Circuit Court will be reversed, and this court, proceeding to enter judgment, reverses the judgment of the county court, ordering the opening of the road.