State ex rel. Fatzer v. Board of County Commissioners

270 P.2d 224, 176 Kan. 366, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 8, 1954
DocketNo. 39,445
StatusPublished

This text of 270 P.2d 224 (State ex rel. Fatzer v. Board of County 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
State ex rel. Fatzer v. Board of County Commissioners, 270 P.2d 224, 176 Kan. 366, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 283 (kan 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This is an original action in quo warranto by the state in the name of the attorney general, whereby the plaintiff asks us to oust two boards of county commissioners from exercising alleged, assumed and illegal powers having to do with the construction of a [367]*367bridge across the Kaw River, which flows between the two counties. Each of the two boards of county commissioners have answered and parties have stipulated as to the facts. The action has been submitted to us for final determination.

The Kaw River runs in a meandering line in a general easterly direction. Highway 40 and 24 runs east and west on the north side of and in a general way parallel to the river. Towns on Highway 40 and 24, of which we shall speak, are St. Marys and approximately six miles west, Belvue. Each town is about a mile north of the river. Wabaunsee county is on the south side of the river. Pottawatomie county on the north. The river flows between the two counties.

Prior to 1950 there were four bridges across the Kaw between these two counties. Two of them went out in 1950, a third one went out in the flood of 1951.

The petition alleges the two boards met in a joint session on August 27, 1951, to discuss the building of such a bridge, under the provisions of Art. 2, Chap. 10 of G. S. 1949; that it was agreed the county engineers of the two counties should proceed to select a favorable site and report to the two boards; that a site was selected at a point on the river approximately 2M miles east of Belvue, which would be referred to as the East Proposed Site; that on September 17, 1951, the two counties made an agreement with a firm of- engineers to prepare preliminary estimates for the cost of the bridge upon that site; that on January 31, 1952, at a joint meeting of the boards they were authorized to make an application for federal funds and both counties agreed to share the remainder of the cost equally; that on February 12, 1952, they requested a secondary road designation from the state highway commission in order that the north approach to the bridge might be upon a secondary highway and this request for a secondary road designation was at a location upon the site selected about 2M miles east of Belvue; that on May 15, 1952, both counties were informed that the federal approval of the bridge project had been obtained and on June 12, 1952, at a joint meeting it was voted to hold an election on August 15, 1952, to determine whether bonds should be voted with which to build such bridge; that each board authorized such an election on the question whether each county would issue $250,000 to pay its respective cost of building a bridge at a point on the Kaw approximately 2% miles east of Belvue; that the ballots [368]*368used stated the question was whether bonds should be voted to build a bridge at such site; that said elections were duly and regularly held in both counties the same day and by a more than two-thirds majority said bond issues were approved by the electors of the respective counties and the site thus established by said election; that on August 11, 1952, a three-way contract was entered into by the counties, the state highway commission and an engineering firm for the payment of engineering fees; that thereafter at the request of the board of Wabaunsee county the engineering firm selected a site at a point approximately one-fifth of a mile east of Belvue, known as the West site; that on April 24, 1953, the board of Wabaunsee county declared itself to be unanimously in favor of the East site; that on May 11, 1953, the board of Pottawatomie county voted two to one in favor of the West site; that on August 3, 1953, the board of Wabaunsee rescinded their action of April 24, 1953, and voted that the bridge be built at a third site approximately 1% miles east of Belvue, about 800 feet east of the West site and this site was known as the Middle site; that all the proceedings occurred after the bond election, wherein the electors by their affirmative vote selected the original site about 2/2 miles east of Belvue; that on August 14, 1953, at a joint meeting of the two boards a resolution was passed by a vote of 5 to 1 to proceed with ■ the construction plans for a bridge ■ at the Middle site at a point about a mile and one-fifth west of the East site; that the actions of the two boards selecting the Middle site constituted an illegal exercise of a discretionary power no longer possessed by defendants; that the East site was selected by the people at the election and any attempt to select any other site was a refutation of such action and illegal, and defendants were without discretionary power to change the location to any other site; that the bonds had been sold and in order to avert unnecessary delay and risk the loss of federal funds, the original jurisdiction of the court has been invoked.

The prayer was the boards be ousted from exercising the illegal powers described and that this court declare the law applicable and direct the defendants to proceed with the construction of the bridge upon the site selected by the people at a point approximately 2/á miles east of Belvue.

The boards filed similar answers in which they admitted many of the allegations of the petition and denied that the county engineers picked a site for the bridge, as alleged; that they picked a typical [369]*369location for a cost estimate, which would reflect the cost of any bridge built in that general vicinity; denied that the consulting engineers picked alternative sites but the three sites were submitted to the boards for final selection; denied that the electors by their affirmative vote selected the original site; denied that their action in selecting the Middle site constituted an unlawful and illegal act and alleged that unless plaintiff be denied the relief sought the construction of the bridge would suffer irreparable harm and possible loss of the bridge.

The prayer was that the writ be denied.

The stipulation of facts as far as we are concerned states that on August 24, 1950, at the preliminary meeting the two boards decided to have their county engineers select a favorable location and report; that it was originally contemplated that the consulting engineer pick a tentative, typical location, but his fee was considered too high and the boards instructed their county engineers to do it; it was also contemplated that the preliminary engineering on the typical location would give the respective county boards and the consultant sufficient information with which to proceed to pick a permanent site for the bridge. The contract between the two county boards and the engineering firm provided the counties agreed to select tentative sites; one of these is referred to as 2/2 miles east of Belvue, thence south at right angles, 2 miles to the Kaw River; it was necessary to make a request of the engineer of secondary roads for a secondary road designation; this request referred to a location about 2M miles east of Belvue; the request for federal aid referred to the same location; the letter from the engineer of secondary roads advising that federal funds had been approved only mentioned a location between Belvue and St. Marys; the resolution for each county to call an election referred to a point approximately 2/2 miles east of Belvue; the notice of the special election referred to a point approximately 2%

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Related

Board of County Commissioners v. Robb
171 P.2d 784 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 224, 176 Kan. 366, 1954 Kan. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-fatzer-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kan-1954.