51 Kan. 185 | Kan. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought to enjoin the collection of an assessment made upon the plaintiff’s land for the construction of a sidewalk on a street upon which the land •abutted. The plaintiff has been the owner of the land since 1871, and along the south side of the same there has been for at least 20 years a highway. Although it lay close to Kansas City, the land was outside of the city limits until January, 1888, when the limits of the city were extended so as to include the plaintiff’s land. The road, or street, upon which the land adjoined was variously known as the “Quindaro road,” “Quindaro boulevard,” and “Quindaro avenue.” After appropriate proceedings, the city required the building of a sidewalk on this street, and it was constructed along the south side of the plaintiff’s property, at a cost of $313.20, for the payment of which & special assessment was made upon the abutting land. After the special assessment had been extended upon the tax roll, and the county treasurer was proceeding to collect the same, this action was begun, with the result that the special tax was sustained and the injunction denied.
The principal contention is that Quindaro avenue, or boulevard, upon which this sidewalk was constructed, is not a street,
A reference is made to Heiple v. City, 8 Pac. Rep. 907, as an authority against imposing the special tax upon a roadway brought within the corporate limits. That decision appears to have been controlled by peculiar statutes with reference to the divided control of counties and cities oven highways; and even there it is held that the case would be “different where by the act the limits of the city are extended and new territory is acquired, and subjected to the laws and jurisdiction of the municipality.” Judge Elliott, in treating of this subject in his work on Roads and Streets, says:
“Our opinion is that, as soon as a town or city is incorporated, the public ways, that is, ways belonging to the public and not owned by private corporations, come within the jurisdiction and control of the new public corporation, unless the statute expressly or impliedly continues the authority of the county or township officers. It is apparent that the ways must, of necessity, change character and the servitude be much extended. This extension carries with it wider duties and greater liabilities, thus requiring essentially different control*191 and care. . . . Where there is no statute, the corporation' of a city seems naturally to imply that the highways within its territorial limits become streets, and, as such, subject to the control of the municipality.” (Elliott, Roads & St. 313.)
“Unless the legislature declares otherwise, an extension of the corporate limits imposes upon a city the same duties and liabilities as to the streets in the annexed territory as rest upon it in reference to the streets in the original territory of the city.” (15 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, 1017.)
We conclude that the city authorities had the power to construct the sidewalk on Quindaro avenue or boulevard, and to assess the cost of the same against the abutting property.
Some other objections to the special tax are mentioned in plaintiff’s brief, but they were not urged in the oral argument. One is that the petition for the sidewalk was insufficient, because it designated the street as Quindaro avenue. It appears to have been known as Quindaro avenue, although it was variously designated in the record.. It is sometimes spoken of as Quindaro road, as Quindaro boulevard, and as Quindaro avenue. It was designated as Quindaro avenue in the petition, and by the same name in the ordinance providing for the sidewalk. It further appears that subsequently the name was definitely fixed by ordinance as Quindaro boulevard. We think the designation of the street was sufficiently definite, so that no one could be misled or prejudiced.
There is a further objection, that the petition did not have a sufficient number of signers. The record shows this claim to be unfounded; and, more than that, neither of these objections was brought to the attention of the district court. At the trial, counsel for plaintiff stated that there was no objection to the petition nor to the regularity of any of the preliminary proceedings, except as to the detailed estimate of the cost of the proposed improvements which is required to be made under oath by the city engineer. Neither is there anything substantial in this last objection, as the lack of an estimate was not alleged in the petition as a ground for injunction. An inquiry was made of the city clerk if he found
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.