Board of Education v. City of Kansas City

63 P. 600, 62 Kan. 374, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1901
DocketNo. 11,761
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 P. 600 (Board of Education v. City of Kansas City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. City of Kansas City, 63 P. 600, 62 Kan. 374, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 6 (kan 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Doster, C. J.:

This was an action brought by the defendant in error, the city of Kansas City, against the plaintiff in error, the board of education of Kansas City, to enjoin the erection of a high-school building upon what the plaintiff in said suit claimed to be ground dedicated to public-park purposes, but which the defendant claimed to be ground dedicated to it for school purposes. The defendant in its answer prayed [375]*375for affirmative relief quieting its title to the disputed tract. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, ¡denying affirmative relief to the defendant, and, in addition, enjoining the erection of the school building.

The facts were agreed on in the court below, a summary of which was that in 1857 a number of persons associated themselves together as a town-site company, under the name of the Wyandotte City Company, for the purpose of purchasing lots and devoting them to town-site purposes. Among other things, the town-site company appointed one John McAlpine trustee to receive conveyances for it and to plat its lands and to execute deeds to its lots. In 1859 McAlpine, in pursuance of the authority conferred, platted the company’s lands and filed a plat designating the streets, alleys, parks, and public grounds. . On the plat was indorsed the following matter indicating a dedication of some of the grounds to public purposes:

“public grounds.”
“The levee extending from the northern boundary of the Perry tract to the northern boundary of the town, and from the front lots to the river, also a public square known as 'Oakland Park,’ bound by Washington avenue on the north, Eleventh street on the west, Kansas avenue on the south and Tenth street on the east, said square being 650 feet long by 628 feet wide ; also Huron Place, excepting a lot on the southwest corner, one on the southeast corner, and also one on the northeast corner, which are respectively 150 feet square, and dedicated to church purposes ; also excepting so much as is occupied by the Methodist Church South, and by the burying ground adjoining said church, as repx’esented on the map.”

[376]*376The tract now in dispute and the adjoining grounds were represented on the plat as follows :

The city of Wyandotte, the predecessor in municipal interest of the defendant in error, immediately upon the filing of the plat began to claim and exercise authority over the tract’designated by the above plat, and it and its successor, the defendant in error, have continued to claim and exercise authority over it. However, the only instances of the exercise of such authority were in planting shade-trees, in allowing or refusing the use of the grounds for circus shows, base-ball playing, political meetings, and the like. These uses of the grounds under the authority of the city were made with the knowledge and without the objection of the plaintiff in error. In June, 1867, the board of directors of school district No. 1 of Wyandotte county, [377]*377the predecessor in interest of the plaintiff in error, filed with the city council the following petition:

‘ ‘ To the City Council of Wyandotte: Gentlemen —The undersigned school board of district No. 1 for Wyandotte county, which is the city of Wyandotte, request you, if it is not deemed inconsistent or improper, to convey to them that portion of Huron Place dedicated for seminary purposes in their official capacity for the purpose of erecting a schoolhouse thereon, in such manner as Oakland Park has been conveyed for the purpose of the state asylum of the blind.”

The city council granted the prayer of the petition by resolution in the following words :

“Resolved, That the mayor be authorized to execute such papers as may be necessary to, convey to school district No. 1 of Wyandotte county, for the erection óf a schoolhouse on that part of Huron Place bounded on the east by Sixth street, on the north and south by church lots named on plat of Wyandotte city, and west by a line drawn from the western boundaries of said church lots, reserving twenty feet on the north and south sides of said land so to be conveyed.”

In the month following the board of school directors addressed another petition to the city council asking an additional amount of ground for school purposes. The petition was in the following language :

“To his Honor, the Mayor, and Council of the City of Wyandotte:
Gentlemen — .We, the undersigned,'.'would respectfully represent that, if deeming it not inconsistent or improper, you could grant us an additional sixty-five feet on the back part of the ground recently granted to district No. 1 of Wyandotte county, in Huron Place, it would greatly benefit said school district and allow us the opportunity to erect the proposed schoolhouse in said district in a far more eligible situation. The land we seek will be a strip sixty-five feet wide, the length of the original grant on the west side of said tract.”

[378]*378. Action by the city council on the last petition was taken, as follows:

“Mr. Washington presented a petition from the school board of district No. 1, praying for the grant of an additional tract in Huron Place for the same purpose and on the same terms as for the tract heretofore granted.
“Whereupon Mr. Washington moved that a strip sixty-five feet wide and the length of said original grant be conveyed to said school district by the mayor for the same purpose and on like conditions as for the conveyance heretofore made. Carried.” •

No conveyances or other writings were ever executed by the city in pursuance of either of the above-quoted resolutions. The board of school directors entered upon the grounds designated “Seminary Place” and erected thereon a school building at a cost, as alleged in the defendant’s answer, of about ten thousand dollars. This building is indicated by the figure drawn within the dotted lines in the plat. The fact of the erection of this school building was admitted in the agreed statement, but the time of its erection was not set forth in the statement. The time was alleged in the answer to have been the latter part of 1867, and the case was discussed before us upon the assumption of that being the correct time, and we shall therefore accordingly consider it correct. The value of the school building erected, while alleged in the petition, was not set forth in the agreed statement. This, perhaps, is immaterial. It must be assumed, in the light of other agreed facts, to have been sufficiently valuable to evidence the expenditure of a substantial sum of money, and to evidence in a substantial manner claims of possessory right. The new school building, the erection of which the defendant enjoined, will cover a greater area of ground than the old school building. [379]*379As to its exact location the language of the agreed statement is peculiar. It is either contradictory or ambiguous.

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Related

State ex rel. Foster v. City of Kansas City
371 P.2d 161 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1962)
Loehler v. United States
90 Ct. Cl. 158 (Court of Claims, 1940)
Baird v. Board, C., South Orange
154 A. 204 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1931)
City of Hopkinsville v. Jarrett
162 S.W. 85 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1914)
Village of Riverside v. MacLain
210 Ill. 308 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 P. 600, 62 Kan. 374, 1901 Kan. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-city-of-kansas-city-kan-1901.