Yoxall v. Comm'rs of Osborne County
This text of 20 Kan. 581 (Yoxall v. Comm'rs of Osborne County) 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.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Upon these facts the judgment of the district court was properly given for the defendant, to-wit, the board of county commissioners of Osborne county. At the time the building was constructed, the town company supposed it could occupy the town-site under the statute, and wishing to benefit its members by increasing the value of the property through the location of the county-seat of the county at Osborne City, it delivered up the premises to said county commissioners, and agreed to supplement this possession with a valid deed of the same. So far as it was able, prior to the levy of the execution, it gave all its interest, right, and title to the block and building to the board; but the decision of the Winfield Town Company v. Maris, 11 Kas. 128, disturbed the calculations of all parties, and afterward the block, as before stated, was deeded directly to the board and their successors. It is immaterial in this case whether the board of county commissioners of Osborne county were occupants and inhabitants of the town-site. If the deed to them was invalid, we cannot in this action set it aside. It clearly appears that at the time this suit was brought the town company had no title or interest in the' premises described, nor has it acquired any [584]*584interest since. The plaintiffs háve no mechanic’s or other lien, and there is no allegation in the petition, nor any evidence to show, that the court-house was constructed to defraud plaintiffs, nor any one else. The original agreement of the parties was made in good faith, and the evidence does not justify us in saying that the commissioners of partition should have set apart the block to the town company. The only remedy the plaintiffs have is against the Osborne City Town Company. They cannot follow property owned and possessed by the county board; nor question the title of the board to property in which neither they nor the town company have any claim, interest, or estate.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
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20 Kan. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoxall-v-commrs-of-osborne-county-kan-1878.