v.
A. T. & Santa Fe Railroad Co.
[*126] The opinion of the court was delivered by
In 1864-5 the A. & P. P. Railroad Co. instituted condemnation proceedings, under the law of 1864, to obtain the right of way through certain tracts of land in Atchison county. And the two principal questions in this case are as to the validity of those proceedings, and as to the quantity of title transferred by them, if valid, to the railroad company.
Were the proceedings in this case in conformity to the statute ? It appears that the application of the railroad company was made on the 24th of August 1864; that the 26th of September following was the day fixed by the commissioners for the commencement of the work of laying off the route; that publication of notice of such time was duly made in the “ Champion,” the first publication being on the 25th of August, and more than thirty days before the appointed day; that the commissioners met at the appointed time and commenced their work; that after completing it they filed in the county clerk’s office a written report thereof; that a copy thereof was duly filed in the county treasurer’s office, the damages paid, and the report thereafter filed and recorded in the office of the register of deeds. It also appears that the then owners of the tracts through which the right of way was condemned accepted the appraisement and received the money, that the road was constructed and in operation through these tracts in 1866; and that in 1868 and 1869 the plaintiff in error purchased the tracts of thé then owners, receiving warranty deeds therefor. At the time of this purchase the hundred-feet strip was not all actually occupied by the railroad company, but only a strip of about twenty feet in width. The balance was and had been cultivated by the prior owners. The affidavit of publication of notice recited that the “notice was published in said newspaper for five consecutive weeks, the first publication being on the 25th day of August 1864, and the last on the 29th day of September 1864.” In recording this affidavit by the register of [*129] deeds a clerical mistake was made, the figure 8 being substituted for 5, so that it stated that the first publication was on the* 28th, and less than thirty days before the appointed time for the meeting of the commissioners. Now it is contended by counsel for plaintiff in error, that the occupation by the railroad company, at the time of the purchase by plaintiff in error being only of a twenty-feet strip was no notice of any claim to the balance of the one-hundred-feet strip, and that the purchaser was chargeable with notice of the condemnation proceedings only as they appeared upon the records of the register of deeds’ office; and that as they there appeared, they showed proceedings invalid, in that no legal notice appeared to have been given of the time of the commissioners’ meeting. In this we think counsel is mistaken. The full legal notice was actually given; the proceedings actually had were regular. By those proceedings the title of the then owners was wholly divested. This was divested, not by a voluntary conveyance, but by proceedings in invitum, to compel a transfer, exactly as by a sheriff’s sale. Now as to such proceedings a party may not trust entirely to the records of the office of register of deeds, but must take notice of whatever appears upon the records of every officer or tribunal having jurisdiction of such proceedings. Again, there was sufficient in the record in the register of deeds’ office to put the plaintiff in error upon inquiry. The report of the commissioners recited that notice had been published for thirty days. The day of the last publication was given as September 29th. Running back five weeks would bring it to August 25th, and not August 28th. This record was but a copy of a copy. Proof of publication was not by the law, in terms at least, required. (Sec. 6 of the act, Laws of 1864, p. 237.) The only object of the publication is notice to the land-owners. If with a defective publication, or without any publication, they had appeared to the proceedings, and accepted the award, neither they nor their grantees would be heard to say that the notice was defective, or omitted. We think therefore, as against this plaintiff the court prop [*130] erly ruled that the proceedings were regular and valid. Some other questions are raised by counsel, but in the view we have taken of these two principal matters, it seems unnecessary to consider them.
The judgment will be affirmed.