Brown v. City of Junction City

251 P. 726, 122 Kan. 190, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 11, 1926
DocketNo. 27,212
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 251 P. 726 (Brown v. City of Junction 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
Brown v. City of Junction City, 251 P. 726, 122 Kan. 190, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 161 (kan 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marshall, J.:

The plaintiffs sued to enjoin the defendants from extending the corporate limits of Junction City so as to include real property owned by them. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs appeal.

It is argued that the ordinance extending the corporate limits so as to include the property owned by the plaintiffs is invalid because the property had not been platted into lots and blocks, was not circumscribed by territory within the corporate limits, and because no petition had ever been presented to the county commissioners of Geary county asking that the territory be taken into the city.

The petition alleged:

“That a number of the tracts owned by the plaintiffs contain more than five acres in one body; that said territory sought to be added to said city by said ordinance is chiefly farming land.”

The answer alleged that in 1881 the land had been platted as an addition to the city of Junction City and that—

“The certificate of said owner specifically provided that the territory was laid out in lots and blocks as an addition to Junction City and dedicated the streets shown by said plat to public use.”

By stipulation, the cause was tried on the affirmative facts alleged in the pleadings and on a plat of the additions in controversy, which [191]*191plat showed that part of the city of Junction City adjacent to the territory sought to be annexed. The plat showed that one of the additions adjoined the west corporate limits of the city and that one corner of the other addition adjoined a corner of the south corporate limits of the city. One of the additions was shown as Price’s addition and the other one was shown as the West Side addition. All of the West Side addition was sought to be annexed, but not all of Price’s addition. The whole of Price’s addition was approximately 1,248 feet wide north and south by 2,648 feet long east and west. A strip off the east end of the addition about 331% feet wide east and west and 1,248 feet long north and south was sought to be added to the city, and another strip off the south side of Price’s addition extending west from the south end of the strip just described 2,316% feet east and west and 187- feet wide north and south, was also sought to be added to the city. The east end of Price’s addition had been subdivided into two blocks numbered 6 and 13, the east one-half of each of which had been subdivided into five lots each 125% feet wide north and south by 331% feet long east and west, each of which contained almost one acre. On the north side of Price’s addition was platted a street known as Fair street, thirty feet wide; and on the south side of that addition was shown a road known as Eighth Street road, sixty feet wide. The plat did not show any streets or alleys through Price’s addition. The plat showed that Price’s addition contained more than seventy acres of land.

The West Side addition, the southeast corner of which adjoined the northwest corner of the corporate limits of the city, extended 980 feet north and south by 509 feet east and west. The plat showed that this addition had been divided into numbered, unnamed tracts and showed one street running through it, and showed alleys running through it, north and south, and east and west. The plat showed that the tract was on the south side of Eighth Street road, which was sixty feet wide, and that on the south side of the tract Fifth street had been extended so as to adjoin on the south that part of the tract which had been subdivided into blocks or parcels.

None of the territory sought to be annexed was circumscribed by the corporate limits of the city.

A plat of the territory sought to be annexed and of a part of the city follows:

[192]

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Related

In Re Petition of City of Shawnee for Annexation of Land
687 P.2d 603 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1984)
Babcock v. City of Kansas City
419 P.2d 882 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1966)
Smith v. City of Emporia
211 P.2d 101 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 P. 726, 122 Kan. 190, 1926 Kan. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-city-of-junction-city-kan-1926.