26 Kan. 345 | Kan. | 1881
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error, to enjoin the latter, as trustee of Superior township, of Osage county, from entering upon the premises of the former to open a supposed highway for the public. Upon the trial, it was admitted and agreed by the parties that the defendant, at the time of filing the petition, was the trustee of Superior township, and as such trustee had ordered one D. M. Clemmer, as the .agent of plaintiff for the premises in controversy, to open a highway, which defendant claimed ran through and across the premises of plaintiff, and which plaintiff had wholly inclosed; that plaintiff was, at the commencement of the action, the owner of the real estate over which the road was alleged to exist; that the disputed highway had been authorized by ch. 103 of the Laws of Kansas of 1866, being an act entitled “An act to establish certain state roads,” approved February 27,1866, and was the seventeenth of the highways provided for in said act; that it had been located by the commissioners named in the act to lay out the state roads, and was a legally-established state road, provided the act was a valid one, and not in conflict with the constitution of the state of Kansas, and provided further, that a legal and valid state road and public highway
Counsel for defendant refer us to § 7, ch. 110, Laws of 1864, and suggest that this act provides for compensation for the right of way of state roads, and that the act of 1866 is simply supplemental thereto, and is to be construed therewith. Unfortunately for this suggestion, §7 of the act of ch. 110 of the Laws of 1864 only provides for compensation for the roads specifically mentioned in that act. Compensation is limited to the rights of way for those roads only, and therefore has no application to the subsequent act of 1866. The other statutes to which we are referred by counsel for defendant in no way strengthen, qualify or extend the provisions of the act of 1866.
The judgment of the district court must be reversed, and the case remanded.