McIntyre v. Board of County Commissioners

15 Colo. App. 78
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1900
DocketNo. 2150
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Colo. App. 78 (McIntyre v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntyre v. Board of County Commissioners, 15 Colo. App. 78 (Colo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

Plaintiff McIntyre, with four other residents, property, owners and taxpayers of the city of Colorado Springs, suing for themselves, as well as for all other residents, property owners and taxpayers of the city, commenced this action to restrain the hoard of county commissioners of the county of El Paso, in which the city of Colorado Springs is situate, from the erection of a county courthouse upon a certain public square within the city, which it was claimed had been dedicated and used for twenty-nine years as a public park. The complaint is very lengthy, and hence, we shall insert only such portions of it as are requisite to a proper understanding of the issues and the questions presented and determined. It recites, that in the year 1871, the Colorado Springs Company, a private corporation, laid off and platted as a town site for the city of Colorado Springs a certain tract of land of which it was the owner; that it filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of the county a plat of said town site, showing the blocks, lots, streets, avenues, alleys and reserved squares, to which plat was attached an acknowledgment of the vice president of the company, as required by law, and then proceeds:

Fourth. That all of the blocks designated upon said plat were divided into lots except a certain block designated on said plat as block number sixty-two (62) lying two blocks [80]*80north of Pike’s Peak Avenue and marked on said plat as Acacia Place, and except a certain block designated on said plat as block number one hundred and twelve and lying two blocks south of Pike’s Peak Avenue and marked on said plat as Alamo Square, neither of said two last named blocks having lots designated thereon. That said Pike’s Peak Avenue runs east and west in said city and is equidistant from either end of said platted ground; that said blocks designated as Acacia Place and Alamo Square are of equal size with all the other blocks within said platted ground, being about four hundred (400) feet square and each bounded by streets on the four sides thereof.”
Fifth. That at the time said plat was filed as aforesaid, said company laid off said ground as the original town site of the city of Colorado Springs, there being then only a few if any residents within the present limits of said city, it being the intention of said the Colorado Springs Company to place upon the market for sale the lots so designated and shown upon said plat.”
Sixth. That, with the purpose of inducing the public to purchase the lots as platted, as aforesaid, which it immediately thereafter began selling to divers and sundry persons with reference to said plat, said Alamo Square and Acacia Place were reserved from sale, and it was then and there given out by said company and so understood by the public generally and by those purchasing lots from said company in said platted ground that both of said blocks of ground would be kept and reserved for the public for public parks, they having been .reserved upon said plat as then provided by statute.
Seventh. That soon thereafter both of said blocks of ground, Acacia Place and Alamo Square, were taken possession of by the city authorities of said Colorado Springs for parks and were improved by the said city authorities at public expense for parks and have ever since been maintained at public expense by the said city authorities for park purposes, being beautified by lawns, shade trees, public walks, water-[81]*81fountains and seats for the accommodation of the general public, and the public for more than twenty (20) years last past has held the open, exclusive, continuous, uninterrupted and peaceable possession of both of said blocks of ground for park purposes and are now so using the same.”
“ Eighth. That the city of Colorado Springs now has a population of about 25,000, and the two blocks of ground aforesaid are the only parks in said city centrally located and are convenient and necessary to the inhabitants thereof and the general public for the purposes to which they have been continuously devoted and the public hold and own an irrevocable easement in said blocks for park purposes.
“ Ninth. That heretofore on or about the day of April, A. d. 1899, the defendants Sinton, France and Doran conspiring with the mayor and city council of the city of Colorado Springs to destroy the park situate on the said block of ground known as Alamo Square, persuaded and induced said mayor and city council to pass an ordinance in words and figures following, to wit:
“ ‘ An ordinance to provide for the relinquishment of all rights in and to block numbered 112, in the city of Colorado Springs, county. of El Paso and state of Colorado, to the county of El Paso, upon certain terms and conditions, that the same may be used as a site for a courthouse for the said county.
“ ‘ Be it ordained by the city council of the city of Colorado Springs :
“ ‘ Section 1. Whereas, the Colorado Springs Company, a corporation, filed in the office of the clerk and recorder of El Paso county, Colorado, a plat of the original town of Colorado Springs, and reserved blocks sixty-two (62) and one hundred and twelve (112) for public buildings, company building and parks; and
“ ‘ Whereas, the county of El Paso, in the state of Colorado, is about to erect a new courthouse for said county;
“ ‘Now therefore, the city of Colorado Springs does hereby relinquish all its right or rights, in and control over [82]*82said block, numbered one hundred and twelve (112) in favor of the said county of El Paso, for the purpose of permitting the said county of El Paso to erect a courthouse upon said block of ground for said county; the city reserving the right to enter in and upon the ground for maintaining its sewer and water systems, and the expense to be borne by the county of El Paso for making any necessary changes upon said ground.
“ 4 Provided, however, that only so much of said block shall be used by the county of El Paso, as may be necessary for the purpose of erecting thereon a courthouse consisting of one building, and for necessary paths, and roadway for ingress to said courthouse and egress therefrom; and that all of the residue and remainder of the said block, numbered one hundred and twelve (112), not so used as above stated, for the erection thereon of said courthouse, shall be appropriately-kept, properly planted and maintained as a public park, at the expense of the said county of El Paso, and the same shall remain a public park forever:
“ ‘ Provided, further, that if the said block of ground, or any part of it, shall at any time be used otherwise than for the purpose of .building and maintaining a courthouse, thereon, unless it be for the future enlargement of said courthouse, then and in that case, all the rights and interests of the city of Colorado Springs, in and to - said block of ground, hereby granted to the said county of El Paso, shall immediately revert to, and become the property, rights and interests of the said city of Colorado Springs, as the same existed immediately prior to the passage of this ordinance; and

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Bluebook (online)
15 Colo. App. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintyre-v-board-of-county-commissioners-coloctapp-1900.