Broadie v. Carson
Broadie v. Carson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by S. F. Broadie against C. W. Carson to quiet the title of the former in eighty acres of what is called school land. Carson claimed title to the land by , reason of a purchase under a school-land contract made in 1885 with a party under whom he now holds. The original pur
Objection is made to testimony to the effect that Carson attended the sale and witnessed the purchase of the land by Broadie. Estoppel was not pleaded by Broadie, and it is therefore contended that testimony of this character was not admissible. The extent of the testimony was a statement by a witness that Carson was present in the courthouse when the bidding was going on and saw the land sold to Broadie. While the court allowed the testimony to be received, it stated that its admissibility was questionable and it would later determine whether it should be considered. The appelleé asserts that the court based its decision upon other and wholly different grounds, and that this is manifest from its written opinion. That opinion is not in the abstract. The evidence, however, was only admitted tentatively, and, the case being before the court alone, it must be presumed that the court ignored all evidence to which objections should have been sustained. (Lee v. Railway Co., 67 Kan. 402; Olathe v. Cosgrove, 71 Kan. 885; McCready v. Crane, 74 Kan. 710.)
There is a further contention that equity requires that Broadie should have paid or restored to Carson the purchase price which he paid for the land on the for
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- S. F. Broadie v. C. W. Carson
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. School Land • — ■ Forfeiture ■ — ■ Evidence. The return made by the sheriff upon a notice of a proposed forfeiture of a school-land contract was incomplete and insufficient, but under -the provisions of chapter 373 of the Laws of 1907 proof was received that the words “Cancelled, December 23, 1895,” were written across the record of the school-land sale and parol proof was admitted showing that legal service of the notice had been actually made. Held, that the proof was properly received and that it was sufficient to show a valid forfeiture. 2. - Second Purchaser Not Required to Pay Original Purchaser Amount Expended. One who purchases forfeited school land and brings his action to quiet his title as against those holding under the original purchaser is not required by any rule of equity to pay to the original purchaser or his assignee the amount paid to the state by him upon the original purchase. 3. Evidence — Trial to the Court — Presumption on Review. In a case tried before the court, where incompetent testimony is tentatively received subject to reconsideration when the case is finally decided, the presumption must be that the court ignored all evidence to the 'introduction of which objections should have been sustained.