26 Kan. 658 | Kan. | 1881
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 20th day of August, 1879, the board of county commissioners of the county of Pottawatomie ordered that an election be held on the 23d day of September, 1879, for the purpose of permanently locating the county seat of that county. At the day named the election was held, and the returns made to the county clerk, by which returns it appeared that of the four places voted for, Warn ego and Westmoreland received the highest number of votes, and no place receiving a majority of all. Before any canvass of the vote at such election, the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, obtained a temporary order of injunction restraining any canvass of the votes or any declaration of the result of the election. The temporary injunction thus obtained continued till June 27th, 1881, when upon a final trial it was dissolved, and judgment entered for the defendants. This judgment plaintiff in error seeks to review by this proceeding.
A second proposition is, that Pottawatomie county is outside the reach of the general county-seat law, because its county seat had been established by special act of the legislature. The facts are these: At the last session of the territorial legislature an act was passed, providing that the electors of Pottawatomie county should first vote upon the question of then determining the location of the permanent county seat; and if a majority voted in favor of making such determination, then a second election should be had for selecting the place for the county seat. In 1862 an act was passed by the legislature, which recited that the result of the elections held under the prior act was that Louisville received a ma jority of the votes, and was thereby declared and established the permanent county seat of Pottawatomie county. Does the fact that the county seat was thus established take this county outside the scope of the general act
Again, when the petition for an injunction was filed in'this case, the then county commissioners filed an answer confessing everything, and upon that a temporary injunction was ordered. Before the case came to final trial the terms of office of two of the commissioners had expired, and on application their successors were substituted as parties defendant, and permitted to file an answer, which they did, denying the charges in the petition. Of this action of the court plaintiff complains. We think it eminently right and just. The action was an action, not against the county commissioners as individuals, but against them in their official capacity, and to restrain official action. Whenever there was a change in the members of that board, a change in the persons of the defendants was
There being no other matters to consider, the judgment of' the district court must be affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in both the syllabus and opinion delivered in this case, except that I have great doubts as to the correctness of the last paragraph of the syllabus, and of the conclusions reached in the last portion of the opinion. These relate to the exclusion of evidence under the pleadings. The plaintiff’s petition alleged, among other things, that “no petition nor any petition signed by three-fifths of the legal electors of said [Pottawatomie] county has ever been presented to the board of county commissioners of said county,” asking for an election for the relocation of the county seat of said county, and that the “county commissioners illegally, fraudulently and without authority adopted and made an order” for such an election. The defendants’ answer was a general denial. While I think the court below might have permitted the plaintiff under the pleadings to introduce evidence tending to show that the petition which was actually presented to the county commissioners and which appeared