Richardson v. Township
Decision Date | 10 November 1897 |
Docket Number | 226 |
Citation | 50 P. 941,6 Kan.App. 521 |
Parties | JENNIE RICHARDSON AND G. B. RICHARDSON v. GREENWOOD TOWNSHIP, FRANKLIN COUNTY |
Court | Kansas Court of Appeals |
November 10, 1897,
Error from Franklin District Court. Hon. A. W. Benson, Judge. Dismissed.
Proceedings dismissed.
C. A Smart and W. S. Jenks, for plaintiffs in error.
H. P Welsh and F. A. Waddle, for defendant in error.
This action was commenced in the District Court of Franklin County, Kansas, by Greenwood Township in said county, as plaintiff, against G. B. Richardson, Jennie E. Richardson, and Frank Tripp, as defendants. The petition alleged the location of a public highway and that the defendants were obstructing it, and asked that they be restrained therefrom.
The injunction was allowed, and the defendants Richardson bring the case here for review, alleging the following:
First, Greenwood Township could not properly bring such action; second, the court could not correct wrongs already committed; third, the title to the land in dispute had never been adjudicated,-- an injunction suit is not a proper action in which to try title to land.
The plaintiffs in error cite numerous authorities to sustain the first specification of error. The case of Montana Township v. Ruark (39 Kan. 109, 18 P. 61), which is not cited, is conclusive upon this point, and settles also the third specification of error, and both propositions are settled in favor of the plaintiffs in error.
Having determined that the law is with the plaintiffs in error, it becomes pertinent to inquire wherein the court erred. The petition was not attacked either by motion, demurrer, or an objection to the introduction of evidence thereunder. The court was given no opportunity to rule upon the questions raised in the first and third specifications of error. They are raised for the first time in the brief of the plaintiff in error. "Only such questions as have been raised and decided in the trial court will be reviewed by the Supreme Court, in a proceeding in error." Byington v. Comm'rs of Saline Co., 37 Kan. 654, 16 P. 105.
A further examination of the record satisfies us that we have no jurisdiction to review the judgment in this case. The judgment is a joint judgment against G. B. Richardson, Jennie E. Richardson, and Frank Tripp. The restraining order is joint, and the judgment for costs, taxed at $...
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