15 Kan. 55 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Many of the questions in this case are similar to those in the case of Challiss v. Commissioners of Atchison County, just decided. They need not therefore be considered here. One principal difference is, that here the sale certificates were held by the plaintiff in error, Stebbins, and it may with more propriety be said that an injunction will not “embarrass the collection of the public revenues.” The county has received the money, and the controversy is one simply between two individuals, one seeking to free his property from an apparent incumbrance, and the other seeking to perfect a title to that property — a title which he has acquired for but a small fraction of the value of the property. Yet, notwithstanding the difference in the positions which the defendants in the two cases occupy, the same decision must be made in each, for the claim of the plaintiff in each rests upon the same foundation. It matters little what wrong a defendant may be doing, unless the plaintiff’s claim is equitable; and in each of these cases the plaintiff, without paying a cent toward the public revenues, is asking a court of equity to release him from all obligations to pay. And
One other question is presented, which affects a part of the property only. At one time there had been what was known as the Spring Garden-Addition of the city of Atchison. This was duly laid off into lots and blocks, and some of the tax certificates held by the defendant were upon lots in this addition. But before any of these tax proceedings were had this addition had been duly vacated, so that the lots and blocks had ceased to exist. It is insisted that by the vacation this addition ceased to be a part of the city, or subject to city taxation. On the 12th of February 1858 an act was passed by the territorial legislature concerning the city of Atchison, by the first section of which the boundaries of the city were defined. The property in controversy was outside of those boundaries. On the 11th of February 1859 another act was passed, in the first section of which it was provided among other things, that “all additions which have been or-may hereafter be made shall become and be a part of said city, after the plat thereof shall have been filed as required by law twelve months, and shall be liable for taxes as other city property after the commencement of the first fiscal year of said city thereafter.” By this act this addition became a part of the city. And the act provides for no temporary or conditional annexation. The ground platted is not to be a part of the city so long only as it remains platted, but it is to become and be a part of the city permanently. The act provides a way in, none out of the city. But in
The order of the district judge refusing to dissolve the injunction will therefore be reversed, except as to the lots in the so-called Spring Garden Addition, and as to them it will be affirmed. The costs will be divided!