Dreyer v. Siler

308 P.2d 127, 180 Kan. 765, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 275
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1957
Docket40,386
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 308 P.2d 127 (Dreyer v. Siler) 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
Dreyer v. Siler, 308 P.2d 127, 180 Kan. 765, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 275 (kan 1957).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wertz, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the trial court permanently enjoining defendants from removing sand from the Kansas *766 River above a specified point. The facts pertinent to the issues involved are as follows: The appellee is an individual doing business as Dreyer Sand Company, and will be hereafter referred to as plaintiff. The appellants are partners doing business as American Sand and Material Company, and will be referred to as defendants. Both are engaged in sand pumping operations on the Kansas River in Wyandotte County. Defendants’ plant is located on the south bank of the Kansas River. Plaintiff’s plant is located upstream from defendants’ on the north bank of the river. The rights of the parties are governed by their contracts with the state. The sand from navigable, or other rivers owned by the state, is the property of the state, and the authority for its removal from such rivers is governed by the Laws of 1913, ch. 259, as amended by G. S. 1949, Chapter 71.

G. S. 1949, 71-101, provides that from and after the taking effect of the act (April 30, 1913), it shall be unlawful for any person, partnership or corporation to take from within or beneath the bed of any navigable river or any other river which is the property of the state any sand lying in the bed of any such river, except in accordance with the act.

Section 71-102 provides the authority for the consent of the removal of sand from the navigable rivers of this state was vested in the state board of administration. This board was given authority to enter into contracts specifying the terms and conditions for the removal of sand and to make rules and regulations governing the same. The authority granted the board of administration under the mentioned section was later transferred to the director of purchases of the state department of administration, effective July 1, 1953. (G. S. 1955 Supp., 75-3751 [2].)

The rights of both parties to take the sand from the Kansas River were based on contracts pursuant to section 71-101 et seq. Defendants’ contract was dated June 3, 1937, and plaintiff’s contract, August 8, 1938. The contracts were identical so far as pertinent to the issues involved in this case. They provided for a royalty payment to the state, keeping of proper records for inspection and, among other provisions, each sand company agreed to be bound by all existing and future regulations of the board of administration, determining locations at which, or terms and conditions under which sand may be removed from a river and all existing or future regulations by statutes or statutory authority, and provided that the contract might be revoked at any time either sand company violated any of the regulations aforementioned.

*767 Plaintiff and defendants operated for a number of years in their original locations without trouble. Eventually, operators in the vicinity began to experience a shortage of sand due to the drouth and low water conditions. As a result, defendants were forced to dredge further upstream in order to reach sand, as early as 1949. Roth plants were destroyed in the flood of 1951. Shortly before the flood, the board of administration adopted rules and regulations relative to taking sand from navigable river beds. These rules were filed with the revisor of statutes (G. S. 1949, 77-410), and became effective July 14, 1952. Those pertinent hereto are as follows:

“44-2-2. Contractee agrees to comply with all existing or future resolutions determining locations, and to notify said Board and obtain permission as to location of new site, as it is necessary for Board to consider the wishes of City, County, Waterway and Highway' Engineers as well as the Cities, Counties, and Drainage Districts.”
“44-2-6. Contractee shall not remove sand at a place within a distance of 1,500 feet above the location of the nearest plant or structure thereto erected and maintained for that purpose.”

Subsequent to the flood, plaintiff rebuilt its plant at the same location. Defendants, by letter of July 18, 1952, advised the board of administration of their intention to relocate their plant, and asked permission for such action. A representative of the board checked the matter, but no action was taken either approving, or disapproving permission for defendants to relocate. Without further action, defendants rebuilt their plant and located their tipple approximately 1,000 feet upstream from its original site, directly across from plaintiff. In September, 1954, plaintiff notified the director of purchases, to whom authority had been transferred, complaining that defendants were crowding him with their pumping operations. The director of purchases made an investigation, and hearings were had wherein both plaintiff and defendants appeared. As a result of the hearings, the director of purchases issued a cease and desist order, dated May 12, 1955, prohibiting defendants from removing sand upstream above a line running north and south across the river and through the center of plaintiff’s plant as it was originally established. No subsequent action was taken by defendants on that order. They ignored the cease and desist order and continued to pump sand within the territory allowed plaintiff under the contract and order.

On the facts related and others presented, the trial court concluded as a matter of law that the rights of plaintiff and defendants *768 to take sand from the Kansas River were to be determined by their respective contracts with the state and the applicable statutes, rules and regulations; that the rules and regulations adopted by the board of administration were valid and binding, and governed the rights of the parties; that defendants were taking sand upstream from the line described in the order of the director of purchases, dated May 12, 1955, within a distance of 1,500 feet above plaintiff’s plant, in violation of Rule 44-2-6; that the director of purchases had the authority to make the order requiring defendants to desist from violating the mentioned rule; that such order was not unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious; that at the present rate of pumping, all available sand would soon be exhausted, and entered judgment accordingly, from which defendants appeal.

Defendants first contend that plaintiff had no right to maintain this action for injunctive relief, and that the action could be maintained only by the attorney general in behalf of the state. Plaintiff was not seeking an injunction because of alleged damages to any public property. The record discloses that defendants moved their plant across the river from plaintiff without permission from the board of administration (71-102), and began pumping sand from the area allotted to plaintiff. The trial court found that at the present rate of pumping, all sand available to plaintiff and defendants, above the line established by the director of purchases in his order, would soon be exhausted. The action of defendants, if allowed to continue, would eventually lead to closing plaintiff’s plant.

Where a private citizen is likely to be injured in some special manner or whose situation is peculiarly affected by the exercise of usurped authority, he may maintain an action for injunctive relief.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
308 P.2d 127, 180 Kan. 765, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dreyer-v-siler-kan-1957.