75 P. 1113 | Kan. | 1904
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by Peter A. Hartig to restrain the city of Eudora, a city of the third class, Charles Albright, street commissioner, and Frank Schaffer, marshal of said city, from entering upon the lands described in his petition 'and opening streets and alleys thereon. All the lands described in plaintiff’s petition were once within the corporate limits of the city of Eudora, and the streets in question had been surveyed, platted and dedicated to the public. After the rendition of the judgment Peter A. Hartig died, and the cause was regularly revived in the name of plaintiffs. The city prosecutes error.
Many exceptions were saved to the ruling of the district court, and are urged here, but the decision of one question will finally determine the rights of the parties. Plaintiff in error contends that, while this land was embraced within the corporate limits of the
“On July 7, 1883, the plaintiff, with fifty-seven others, presented to the board of county commissioners of Douglas county, Kansas,'a petition asking that body to vacate First street, between I and H streets; Second street, between I and E streets ; Third street, between F and 0 streets; D and E streets, between the Wakarusa and Kansas rivers ; also the alleys in blocks 102, 103, 104, 106, 109, 140,141, 142, 174,176, 177, and 210, which petition was granted by said board on August 6, 1883. All of said streets and alleys were embraced and included in the real estate in controversy. Said order of the board of county commissioners granting said petition has never been revoked or appealed from, except that about one year later the said board made an order revoking the first order. The last order was made without notice to any one. The said petition was presented and the order was made under and pursuant to chapter 115a of the Laws of 1885. ”
The city of Eudora contends that the commissioners had no power to vacate such streets and alleys, but that if they had, the order was afterward set aside; that the commissioners had no authority to open streets or alleys in an incorporated city either by setting aside former orders vacating such streets or otherwise ; consequently, if the order of July 7, vacating the streets and alleys, was within the power of the commissioners, they could not thereafter annul or set it aside by any subsequent order. To ascertain whether the commissioners had power to vacate streets and alleys in such cities in 1883, reference must be had to the statute as it then existed. We find that chapter 108, General Statutes of 1868, conferred power upon the commissioners to vacate streets and alleys in
“To open, widen or otherwise improve or vacate any street, avenue, alley or lane within the limits of the city, and also to create, open and improve any new street, avenue, alley or lane.”
This latter act was amended and revised. Chapter 108, General Statutes of 1868, was repealed by chapter 60, Laws of 1871. By section 55 of that act, power was conferred upon the mayor and council “to open, widen, extend or otherwise improve any street, avenue, alley or lane; to create, open and improve any new street, avenue, alley or lane ; and also to annul, vacate or discontinue the same, whenever deemed necessary or expedient.”
In 1876 the legislature enacted chapter 134, which is entitled “An act providing for the vacation of streets, alleys and other public reservations.” Section 3 reads:
“Whenever it shall be desired to vacate any street, alley or other public reservation in any improved town site not embraced in any incorporated city, the person, persons or corporation so desiring shall give notice by advertising for six consecutive weeks in a weekly newspaper of general circulation in said town, that, at the next regular session of the county commissioners of the county in which such town is located, a petition will be presented to said commissioners praying the vacation of such street, alley or other public reservation, describing the same properly.”
This section applies to improved town sites not embraced in any incorporated city. Under that act, the
“Whenever it shall be desired to vacate any block, lots, park, reservation, street or alley, or any part of such block, park, reservation, street or alley, in any improved town site, the person, persons or corporations so desiring shall give notice by advertisement, for four consecutive weeks, in a weekly newspaper of general circulation in said town, that at the next regular session of the county commissioners of the county in which such town is located, a petition will be presented to said commissioners praying the vacation of such blocks, lots, park, reservation, street, alley, or any part of such block, park, lots, reservation, street or alley, describing the same properly.”
By this act, which omits the clause “not embraced in any incorporated city,” found in chapter 134, Laws of 1876, the commissioners are granted the power to vacate the streets and alleys in any improved town site. The only difference between chapter 134, Laws of 1876; and chapter 190, Laws of 1877, is the omission from the latter of the clause ‘‘not embraced in any incorporated city.” It appears that the latter act was passed expressly to confer upon the commissioners power to vacate streets and alleys in any incorporated town site, whether such streets and alleys are embraced in the corporate limits of a city or otherwise. This is the only construction that can be given these statutes which offers any reason for the enactment of the act of 1877. In support of this contention, chapter 66, La¡ws of 1893, seems applicable. Section 1 reads:
“Where any town site, or portion of a town site,
The legislature evidently was of the opinion that the commissioners had at some time possessed the power to vacate streets and alleys embraced within the corporate limits of a city; otherwise it would not have inserted the clause removing from the corporate limits of cities territory in which the commissioners had previously vacated streets and alleys.
In 1897 the legislature enacted chapter 267 (Gen. Stat. 1901, ch. 115). This act conferred such jurisdiction upon the district court, but did not repeal either the act of 1871 or the act of 1877. Neither the act of 1871, which conferred upon cities of the third class power to vacate streets and alleys, the act of 1877, which conferred such power upon the commissioners, nor the act of 1897, which conferred the same power upon the district court, is exclusive. Since all of these acts stand, it must follow that each tribunal named may exercise such power when called upon. The legislature may confer such power upon as many different tribunals as it may deem expedient, and any of such tribunals may exercise such jurisdiction.
In Baldwin v. Green, 10 Mo. 410, an action was brought against Baldwin for a failure to work the roads over which Green was overseer. The only question presented was, Did the act incorporating
“An act incorporating a town and vesting the authorities of the town with certain powers does not divest the state or county courts of powers vested in them by a genóral law, unless the act of incorporation declares the powers vested in the corporation to be exclusive . ”
In Hornaday v. The State, 68 Kan. 499, 503, 65 Pac. 656, in speaking of the same power being conferred upon two different bodies of trustees, the court said:
“We can see no good reason why the trustees for the different asylums, commonly known as the state board of charities, should not be given power to condemn lands necessary for the erection of buildings for institutions, the care of which comes within their jurisdiction. The conferring of such power is a matter of legislative discretion, which may be exercised by lodging the same in any number of boards or tribunals authorized to act in behalf of the state. In the statute authorizing the condemnation of lands for railway purposes two methods for determining the value are provided, one by the board of county commissioners acting as appraisers, and the.other by three commissioners selected by the district judge.”
In the case of Shoemaker v. Brown, 10 Kan. 383, 392, it was said :
“It is a general rule that a mere grant of jurisdiction to a particular court, without words of exclusion as to other courts previously possessing the like powers, will only have the effect of constituting the former a court of concurrent jurisdiction with the latter.”
In the City of Ottawa v. Rohrbaugh, 42 Kan. 253, 21 Pac. 1061, this court construed section 3 of the act of
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.