34 Kan. 655 | Kan. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in the nature of trover, brought in the district court of Chase county, by Horace H. Wilcox against Jabin Johnson and others, to recover $1,500, the alleged value of fifty-nine head of cattle belonging to the plaintiff, and alleged to have been converted by the defendants to their own use. The case was tried before the court and a jury, and the court excluded some of the evidence of the plaintiff and sustained a demurrer to the remainder, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff for costs; and the plaintiff, as plaintiff in error, now brings the case to this court.
The facts of the case, as shown by the pleadings and evidence, are substantially as follows: On July 23, 1881, Wilcox owned the cattle aforesaid, and was then keeping them on his own farm in Cottonwood township, Chase county. On that day a complaint was made under § 3, chapter 161, Laws of 1881, to Johnson, who was then sheriff of the county, that the said cattle were wild and undomesticated, and were infected or diseased with what is commonly known as Texas, splenic or Spanish fever. On the same day the sheriff gave a verbal notice of such complaint to A. B. Wagoner, a justice of the peace of Palls township, in' said county. On the next day, which was Sunday, July 24, 1881, Johnson and the justice went to the place where the plaintiff was keeping his cattle, which was about twenty miles from where the justice held his office, and outside of the justice’s own township, and there the justice summoned three resident citizens of Chase county before him as inspectors, and administered to them the oath required by
It is entirely unnecessary to express any opinion with regard to whether the proceedings of the justice, the sheriff and the inspectors are also void because they were had on Sunday.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.