28 Kan. 790 | Kan. | 1882
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The judgment of the trial court, which we are asked to review and reverse, is based upon the validity of a prior judgment, rendered May 31,1878, in the action of The State of Kansas, on the relation of Daniel Hammond, against the plaintiff in error as county clerk of Rush county, allowing a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue against Garner as such county clerk, commanding him to remove immediately all the books, papers, documents, effects and things belonging to the office of county clerk of the county of Rush, to La Crosse, and thereafter to keep the office of county clerk at said town, and adjudging the town of La Crosse to be the county seat of Rush county. In that action, Hammond, the, relator, set forth in his alternative writ that he considered himself aggrieved at the result of the election held in Rush county on the 12th of February, 1878, for the purpose of relocating the county seat of Rush county; that there was malconduct and fraud on the part of the board of commissioners
It is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error that as no-evidence was introduced upon the trial of the cause had on May 31, 1878, and as the'court failed to make any special findings of fact as prescribed by § 9, ch. 79, Laws of 1871, the judgment was and is utterly void. ■ ' Counsel overlook the proposition that a judgment may be irregular or erroneous,
It is finally asserted that at the time of the rendition- of the judgment, plaintiff in error was out of office; therefore that the judgment cannot affect him. Again, that the judgment was rendered in vacation, and therefore utterly void. There is not anything in the answer of plaintiff in error or in the record that shows that plaintiff had vacated or left the office of county clerk; nor does it appear from the record
Counsel very forcibly suggest that if several different actions were commenced, and that each relator set up a different statement of facts, one establishing that the county seat was at Alexandria, another at Brookdale, another at Hampton, another at Pioneer, another at La Crosse, another at Walnut City, and so on, that the result above declared would cause great confusion, and instead of one county seat, several different county seats might be located in the county by judgments of the district court. To this we reply, that while the statute permits any elector who considers himself aggrieved by the result of any election held for removing, locating, establishing, or relocating the county seat of a county, to contest by an action in the district court such election, yet if different actions are brought, and different judgments are rendered, it is possible that the attorney general or county attorney in the interest of the public might, in a proper action instituted for that purpose, have all. of these different judgments reviewed and superseded by a general adjudicating as to which town, city or place was the legal county seat of the county, and thus bring together all of the county offi
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.