v.
Peter P. Elder
The opinion of the court was delivered by
[*261]
[*260] In this state the fee of all streets, alleys, and other public [*261] grounds which have been dedicated to the use of the public by the proprietor of any town or city is vested in the county in which such streets, alleys, or other public grounds are situated, and not in the abutting or adjacent lot-owners. (Comp. Laws, 119, §§ 1, 6; Franklin Co. v. Lathrop, 9 Kas., 453, 461, 462; A. & N. Rld. Co. v. Garside, 10 Kas., 552.) An abutting lot-owner has no more or greater legal right to the alley than any other person has. He does not own the ultimate fee to the alley, nor can he use the same except as an alley. He has no right to use it as a part of his homestead. If the abutting lot-owner were the owner of the fee, and the public had merely an easement over the alley, then we should think that the abutting lot-owner would have the right to extend his homestead on both sides 0£ ^he ajjey. for then ^js homestead would in law be composed of only one tract or body of land. Two or more lots or pieces or parcels of land may, when adjoining, and when united, constitute only one tract or body of land. Therefore a homestead may consist of several lots or pieces or parcels of land provided they all adjoin each other, for then they are in fact but onfe tract or body of land. We do not think that it is necessary that all these lots or pieces or parcels of land should be held by an absolute title in fee simple, or by the same title, or even by the same kind of title, in order that they may all constitute but one homestead; but we think it is necessary that they all be held by some kind of title or interest different from that which the whole public may have in the property. An easement may be created upon or through the land, such as a common road, a railroad, or a water privilege, without in .. .. , . , , -, any manner affecting its character as a homestead, for in such a case the owner of the land still owns the fee to that portion of the land over which the easement is created, as well as to the rest of the land. Yet, whenever several lots or pieces or parcels of land claimed to be held and occupied as a homestead are not contiguous, but are separated by lands in which the person claiming the homestead has no title or [*262] interest, as by lands owned by another, or by a street, alley, or other public ground in a town or city, such several lots or pieces or parcels of land cannot be included in or constitute one and the same homestead. The alley in this case was twenty feet wide. But upon principle, we suppose it can make no difference whether it were twenty feet, or twenty rods, or any greater or less distance. If a resident of a town or city could hold a lot across an alley for a stable, as part of his homestead, why could he not hold it across a street, or across a block, or across many blocks ? and why could not a person residing on a five or ten-acre lot, just outside of the city, hold one hundred and fifty acres of land one mile, fifty miles, or a hundred miles away from his actual residence, from which to get his hay, corn, and other farm produce? The resident of the town or city could have no more right to fence up the alley than the resident of the country would to fence up all the country intervening between his actual residence and the tract of land he might own a hundred miles away. If separate lots or pieces or parcels of land, not contiguous to each other, can be held at all as a homestead, where can any limit as to the distance which may intervene between them, be fixed ? The boundaries of a town or city, for a resident within such town or city, and the boundaries of a state for a resident in the country, would be the only limits which could be fixed in such a case.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.