City of Kingman v. Wagner

213 P.2d 979, 168 Kan. 558, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1950
Docket37,849
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 213 P.2d 979 (City of Kingman v. Wagner) 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
City of Kingman v. Wagner, 213 P.2d 979, 168 Kan. 558, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 328 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This was an action by the city of Kingman for a declaratory judgment that the south thirty-five feet of block 13 in Brown’s Addition to the city of Kingman had been dedicated as a public street, and for a judgment enjoining the defendant from interfering with the city’s use. The trial court held that only a portion of the land was a public street and the city appeals.

In a'preliminary way it may be said that Brown’s Addition to the city of Kingman was platted prior to 1887. No copy of the plat nor any sketch is made a part of the abstract, but from the conclusions of fact, later mentioned, we learn that immediately east of Sugar street, which is apparently the western limits of Kingman, are *559 blocks numbered 13 and 14 which are not divided into lots, and which blocks are not intersected by a platted east and west street; that to the east are other blocks, divided into lots, the blocks being separated by north and south streets and by east and west streets. These east and west streets are seventy feet wide, and Avenue G, if extended west, would include the south thirty-five feet of block 13 and the north thirty-five feet of Block 14. Nettie Wagner, who owns block 13, is the defendant. The owner or owners of block 14 were not made parties and their names are not disclosed by the record as abstracted.

In its petition the city alleged that for more than fifteen years Avenue G as extended across the south end of block 13 and the north end of block 14 had been used as a public street and that the predecessors in title of Nettie Wagner had dedicated the south end of Block 13 as a public highway; that such owner of block 13 had constructed his house at a point north of the extended street line and constructed a fence and set out shrubbery recognizing Avenue •G as extended as a public highway, those acts being done over fifteen years ago, and the situation thus created had continued down to the present time, and that the public had accepted and used the highway; that Avenue G constituted a main entrance to the city from the north and west and had been used by the public, and that a rural carrier mail route was established and maintained over it until the street was obstructed by the defendant.

In her answer the defendant denied generally and alleged she bought block 13 in 1932; that there had been travel across the south end of the block; that she had planted shrubbery south of the extended north line of Avenue G in contemplation of making a private parking place for her own convenience. She also pleaded a willingness to have Avenue G extended its full width of seventy feet, if the city would properly proceed by exercise of its power of eminent domain or by purchase, but she refused to extend Avenue G at a width of thirty-five feet all on the south side of block 13. The city’s reply denied new matter, and alleged matter which we need not detail.

The trial court made conclusions of fact and of law. The conclusions of fact cover the statement above made as to the locations involved and also,

“4. For a long number of years, and at least as early as 1904, travel upon Avenue G has continued on west over and across Blocks 13 and 14 to Sugar Street, and more or less travel from Sugar Street has entered upon Avenue G over said 2 blocks, and such travel has given an appearance of extending *560 Avenue G on west to Sugar Street; with, however, no well-defined boundaries of said street.”
“8. While Avenue G as extended across Blocks 13 and 14 has been traveled and used for upwards of 50 years, the travel and use has not covered the entire 70 feet, but has been largely in the center thereof.”

The trial court also found that prior to 1904 a residence facing south and east had been built about the center of block 13; that defendant acquired that block in 1932 and had set out walnut trees and shrubbery on a line about three feet south of the north line of Avenue G extended; that at the time she acquired the property a fence along the west line of block 13 extended possibly twenty feet south of the north line of Avenue G extended; that five or six years ago, and while defendant and her family were gone, the city had done some grading of the strip, the extent not being shown, and that it had dragged the road for a long number of years; that a rural mail route used the road from 1933 to 1949 and defendant had her mail box on the south side of the road; that the defendant did object to the city setting a light pole and laying some water mains in the extended seventy-foot street and the city desisted; that in February, 1949, the defendant caused a fence to be placed across Avenue G stopping travel thereon, and this action was commenced.

“11. The Court finds that a portion of Avenue G, extended west over and across Blocks 13 and 14 of Brown’s Addition to the City of Kingman, has been traveled and used by the public generally, openly and adversely under claim of right, for a period of more than 45 years, and that the portion of such extension so traveled and used is as follows: Commencing at a point on the east line of Block 13 seventeen feet south of the Ablard stake, thence south for a width of twenty-eight feet, and thence west by south twenty-eight feet wide across Blocks 13 and 14 to the east line of Sugar Street, where the north line of said traveled portion is twenty-four feet south of the Ablard stake.” (The Ablard stake is at the southwest corner of Block 12 and marks the north line of Avenue G.)
“12. Defendant has always claimed all of Block 13, and has at times orally denied any right of travel over the same. However, while a witness in this case, defendant expressed a desire for a street 70 feet in width and has offered to donate more than 35 feet off the south end of Block 13 for such a street.
“13. While the City claims there is no controversy with the owner of Block 14 relative to an extension of Avenue G over it, there is some evidence that such owner claims some part of Avenue G extended, and has recently built a home very close to or actually on the south line of Avenue G extended.”

As a matter of law the trial court concluded:

“1. That a street or roadway by prescription exists over and across the south side of Block 13 in Brown’s Addition to the City of Kingman, Kansas, and that *561 said street or roadway is 28 feet wide as described and outlined in the Findings of Fact hereinbefore set forth, and that no part of said Block 13 extends south of said street or roadway.
“2. That a declaratory judgment should be entered declaring that all of such part of said street or roadway as is included within said Block 13 is a public street and roadway by prescription.”

And that defendant should be restrained from interfering with or obstructing the said street or roadway, and that judgment should be entered accordingly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 P.2d 979, 168 Kan. 558, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-kingman-v-wagner-kan-1950.