Board of Com'rs of Garfield County v. Anderson

1934 OK 6, 29 P.2d 75, 167 Okla. 253, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 16, 1934
Docket25240
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1934 OK 6 (Board of Com'rs of Garfield County v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Com'rs of Garfield County v. Anderson, 1934 OK 6, 29 P.2d 75, 167 Okla. 253, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 480 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

RILEY, C. J.

This action was commenced by !R. L. Anderson, herein referred to as plaintiff, against the board of county commissioners, the county clerk, and the county treasurer of Garfield county, herein referred to as defendants, for an injunction enjoining defendants from erecting a courthouse, and expending any funds of the county therefor, upon a strip of land running across the courthouse square in the city of Enid. The ground alleged and relied upon for relief was that said strip of land had theretofore been dedicated by the board of county commissioners to the public and used for a street or public thoroughfare, and that to so erect such courthouse would completely and permanently close such street or highway over and across the courthouse square.

The land involved is a part of block ten (10) in the original townsite of Enid. The 1/4 section within which this block is located is a part of the one-half section reserved' for townsite purposes from homestead entry by the proclamation of the President opening the Cherokee Strip to settlement in 1893. The land was platted for townsite purposes. The original plat was filed in the office of the register of deeds May 8, 1894. The block in which the land in controversy is located was designated in said plat as block 10, comprising five acres, and is in width (east and west) the same as the other blocks, but in length (north and south) it is practically that of two blocks and' the intervening street. It is divided into two lots, 1 and 2. Lot No. 1 is the north four acres and is marked “Court House Reserve.” Lot 2 is the south one acre and is designated on said plat as “Land Office Reserve.” The entire block is 320 feet wide and 680 feet long. The United States post-office is now located on lot 2. Blocks 9 and 13 are on the east and blocks 11 and 12 are on the west of block 10. There is a street running east and west, 110 feet wide, between blocks 9 and 13, and between blocks 11 and 12, but it is not shown on said plat as extending across block 10.

Patent was issued to Garfield county for lot 1, in block 10, in 1906. The lot is described therein as “Lot numbered One in Block Ten, designated, ‘Court House Reserve’ in the Townsite of Enid, Garfield County, Oklahoma, containing four acres according to the approved plat of said town-site.” The patent is a grant by the United States of America “unto said County of Garfield and its Successors.” The habendum clause reads: “To have and to hold * * * unto the said County of Garfield, and to its successors and assigns forever.”

Before the patent was issued Garfield county had erected a courthouse on lot 1 north of the strip here in controversy. The strip was used as a street until about 1907, when a new courthouse was erected on lot 1 in the center of what is now claimed to be a street and upon the strip in controversy.

This courthouse stood until January 29, 1931, when it was destroyed by fire.

No action was taken to rebuild the court *254 house until about August, 1933, when a resolution was adopted by the board of county commissioners calling an election in said county to vote upon a proposition to make a special levy or tax of two mills to raise sufficient funds, together with funds already on hand and a grant sought from the United States, to erect a new courthouse. The election was held on September 26, 1933, result ing in a heavy majority authorizing such special levy.

Thereafter on October 7, 1933, the board of county commissioners adopted a resolution locating the proposed new courthouse on a site substantially the same as that of the one which had been burned, which would be across the strip now claimed to be a street, the result of which would be to close it.

In the meantime there had been considerable agitation for the opening of a street across lot 1.

About February 21, 1931, there was filed with the county clerk petitions signed by some 600 residents of the city of Enid, requesting the opening of the street, known as Broadway, and also to locate and build a new courthouse on the north half of the “Square.” No official action was ever taken on these petitions.

On June 4, 1931, the board of county commissioners entered into a contract with one G. w. Reddick for the demolition and removal, within 75 days, of the remains of the courthouse, including the basement floor, broken masonry, mortar and debris of every kind. Thereunder, all that remained of the burned courthouse, including basement floor, basement walls, etc., was removed from the courthouse square.

There had also been on said lot and within the area in controversy, a soldier’s monument, a fish pond, a sunken garden, and certain trees and shrubbery. These were all removed. The county surveyor or engineer removed the curbing along the east and west sides of the lot, the full width of the street. The basement of the old courthouse and the sunken garden were filled up at the expense of the county. The county engineer and the city engineer surveyed or staked out a street across the lot to conform to Broadway street as extended across said lot. It was graded and made passable for vehicles. This grading was completed sometime about February, 1932. The strip was used extensively by the public from that time until this action was commenced in the superior court of Garfield county October 27, 1933.

The board of county commissioners, prior to July 1, 1933, was composed of Eli M. Wells, chairman; L. 0. Gossett and E. E. Way, members. At the election held in November, 1932, a new board composed of J. L. Allen, D. G. Anderson, and Chester C. Smith, was elected. Their terms commenced July, 1933.

The question of the location of the new courthouse appears to have been one of considerable local interest. There were three proposed sites advocated by three separate factions, one on the north part of lot 1, one on the south part, and one at the site in controversy.

At the same election at which the question of the special levy was submitted to the voters of the county the question of the site of the proposed new courthouse was submitted; the three sites above mentioned were submitted to the voters.

On the question of the special levy 7,531 votes were cast. On the question of the site for the new courthouse 7,494 votes were cast. The site on the south part of the lot received 1,416 votes; that on the north part received 2,454 votes, and the one in the middle, the site of the old courthouse, the one here involved, received 3,624 votes, Í24 less than a majority of all the votes cast. (It was conceded, however, by both parties at the trial that said election was at most advisory only, and binding on no one as to location of the site).

After the adoption of the resolution locating the proposed new courthouse upon the disputed area, plaintiff commenced this action in the superior court of Garfield county and sought ■ a permanent injunction against the erection of the building on said site as aforesaid.

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1934 OK 6, 29 P.2d 75, 167 Okla. 253, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-of-garfield-county-v-anderson-okla-1934.