Gardner v. Board of Commissioners

164 P. 182, 100 Kan. 351, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1917
DocketNo. 20,796
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 P. 182 (Gardner v. Board of Commissioners) 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
Gardner v. Board of Commissioners, 164 P. 182, 100 Kan. 351, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 325 (kan 1917).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

The owners of a number of city lots in Leavenworth united in an action to enjoin the collection of special assessments levied to cover the cost of a lateral or tributary sewer. A demurrer to their evidence was sustained, and they appeal. ,

One of the appellants owns lot 12, lying in the southwest corner of block 3 in Rees, Doniphan & Thornton’s addition. The others own various lots in block 19 of Day’s addition, which lies just north of the block first described. The two blocks comprise- a sewerage subdistrict. The main sewer, which was paid for by assessments levied upon áll the lots within the sewer district, did not touch either of the blocks referred to, but one branch of it extended "to a point across the street from the middle of the east side of block 3, and another to a point near the northwest corner of block 19. The lateral sewer for the subdistrict was constructed so as to discharge into the main sewer at the northwest corner of block 19, through a pipe laid in the street west of the two blocks. The situation is shown by the accompanying plat, on page 353, the lines through the alleys and street showing the location of the lateral in question.

1. Testimony was given that it would have been practical and easy to connect the sewer in the east-and-west alley in block 3 with the main sewer, which ended across the street from the middle of the east line of the block, as the ground sloped to the east and there was no obstruction in the street, and that this arrangement would have dispensed with the necessity for the lateral sewer running along the street west of the block. The plaintiffs argue that this evidence showed that at least a part of the sewer was unnecessary and that their property should not be taxed with the cost of its construction. [354]*354Whether the property in blocks 3 and 19 should have been connected with the main sewer lying east of block 3 or with that lying northwest of block 19 was a problem of engineering and administration, or perhaps of legislation, concerning which the decision of the municipal authorities, given in good faith, must be regarded as final, and not subject to review by the courts. (28 Cyc. 917; 4 Dillon’s Municipal Corporations, 5th ed., § 1739.) Testimony that it would have been practicable and easy to connect the sewer in block 3 with thq main sewer on the east has no tendency to show that the officials who were charged with the duty of adopting plans for the work acted in bad faith in deciding to have the connection made elsewhere.

[353]*353

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Related

Mullins v. City of El Dorado
436 P.2d 837 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1968)
State v. Storms
372 P.2d 748 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P. 182, 100 Kan. 351, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-board-of-commissioners-kan-1917.