5 Kan. 425 | Kan. | 1870
By the Court,
The case of the city of Topeka v. Perry C. Tuttle was decided at the present term. [Ante, p. 311.] The plaintiff in error desired to reverse a judgment of the district court of Shawnee county, in favor of said Tuttle, and against the said city of Topeka. This court, however, affirmed the said judgment, and the said city of Topeka now asks for a rehearing.
The court below properly refused to give the eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh and seventeenth instructions to the jury, asked by the defendant below. These instructions arc substantially: that the city of Topeka had no corporate existence prior to the 23d day of February, A. I). 1867; and therefore, as a conclusion of law, that it would have been impossible for the city to have repaired the defective street before the 27th day of July, A. D. 1867; and, therefore, that said city was not guilty of any negligence ; and, therefore, that the plaintiff below could not recover. The premises assumed in these instructions are wrong, and the conclusions are wrong.
The plaintiff in error, in bringing her case to this court has left out all the evidence with regard to the time when the city of Topeka was first incorporated. But, as different acts of the legislature have been passed for the incorporation and regulation of the city of Topeka, from February 14th, 1857, up to February 23d, 1867, it may safely be presumed that there was abundance of evidence showing that Topeka had been incorporated (as ■ it, in fact, was,) long prior to the 23d of February, 1867. If the city of Topeka had a corporate existence before the 23d of Februrry, 1867, the passage of the act of February 23d, 1867, would not destroy that corporate existence nor create a new corporation, but it would simply continue the old corporation, in existence under a new
It is true, that the defendant offered to prove, by parol evidence, that the city engineer made estimates of the cost of the repairs, under the orders of the city council; but when the court refused to allow the orders of the city council, to be proved by parol evidence, it seems that the defendant below, did not then prove, or even attempt to prove, by any other evidence, that the engineer ever made any such estimates. It is the fault of the plaintiff in error, and not the fault of the defendant in error, that the evidence is not all here. We cannot presume that the plaintiff in error neglected to bring any evidence here that would have benefited her in the least. If the court below committed any error, it devolves upon the plaintiff in error to affirmatively show it. We cannot presume error in the absence of any such showing.
It is possibly true that there is some good law in the instructions referred to, but there is so little that is good law and so much that is bad law, and the good is so mingled with the bad, that the court could not have given the instructions without committing the most palpable
The rehearing is refused.