Bisso v. Mayor and Councilmen of Morgan City

124 So. 308, 169 La. 122, 1929 La. LEXIS 1951
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 8, 1929
DocketNo. 29929.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 So. 308 (Bisso v. Mayor and Councilmen of Morgan City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisso v. Mayor and Councilmen of Morgan City, 124 So. 308, 169 La. 122, 1929 La. LEXIS 1951 (La. 1929).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

Morgan City is located on the east bank of the Atchafalaya river, or Berwick’s bay, as that part of the river, where the town is located, is known locally. Across the river from where the town is situated is the municipality of Berwick. Both towns are located in the parish of St. Mary, and the state highway, known as the Old Spanish Trail, runs through both of them. For- years past a ferry has been operating between the foot of ■ Freret street in Morgan City and the foot of Canton street in Berwick, serving as a continuation of the public road, leading from the east to the west, or what is now the Old Spanish Trail. The franchise, to operate this ferry, until 1927, was, prior to the incorporation of Berwick, granted by the joint action of Morgan City and the parish of St. Mary; and, after the incorporation of Berwick, by the joint action of that town and the remaining two political subdivisions mentioned. During that period the franchise was sold for a trifle, but since then it has increased considerably in value.

On October 14, 1926, John M. Dalton applied to the council of Morgan City to indorse his application to the police jury of St. Mary parish for a ferry franchise from Morgan City to a point in the parish north of Berwick. The council refused to give this indorsement, and a few days later addressed a protest to the police jury against that body’s granting a franchise to operate a ferry from across the river to Morgan City. Several days following this protest the holder of the ferry franchise between Morgan City and Berwick, which was granted him in 1918, surrendered *125 his franchise, and, on December 7, 1926, the corporations of Morgan City and Berwick passed resolutions ordering that the franchise be sold at public auction, and shortly thereafter Morgan City adopted an ordinance fixing the public ferry wharf in its corporate limits at the foot of Freret street, and dedicating that point to the exclusive use of the holder of ferry franchises sold by it. The ferry franchise between Morgan City and Ber-wick was advertised for sale, as an exclusive franchise, pursuant to the resolution adopted by those municipalities, and was adjudicated for a period of ten years, for $112,-500, to the Morgan City-Berwick Ferry Company, Inc., and the contract between the two municipalities and the adjudicatee was signed on January 13,1927.

On March 9, 1927, the police jury of St. Mary sold to John M. Dalton, whose application for a franchise from the police jury Morgan City had refused to indorse, a franchise to operate a ferry between the town of Morgan City and a point above the corporate limits of the town of Berwick, and entered into a formal contract with Dalton to that effect on April 7, 1927. On October 18, 1928, Dalton leased from R. J. Terrebonne a tract of land in Morgan City, extending from the west side of Front street west to the bank of the river, for ferry purposes. Dalton apparently did not attempt to operate his franchise, but, on December 3, 1928, conveyed the franchise, together with the lease from Ter-rebonne, to Joseph A. Bisso. Bisso attempted to operate his franchise, but, when his ferryboat landed at Morgan City, the municipal authorities arrested his men.

Following the interference by Morgan City with the operation of the franchise granted by the police jury to Bisso, Bisso instituted the present suit against the mayor and councilmen of Morgan City, and the police jury intervened in his behalf, and the Morgan City-Berwick Ferry Company, Inc., intervened for the purpose of defending Morgan City and ■protecting its franchise. The purpose of the suit is to enjoin Morgan City and certain of its officials from interfering with the operation of Bisso’s franchise, and to declare unconstitutional the ordinance dedicating the foot of Freret street to the exclusive use of the lessees of ferry franchises, sold by Morgan City, and also the ordinance of Morgan City, under which Bisso’s men were arrested, when they landed the ferryboat at the point leased from Terrebonne.

The main, if not practically the only, question, in the final analysis, involved, is whether the police jury of the parish of St. Mary has power to grant a franchise for the operation of a ferry from a point within the parish, but not within a municipal-corporation, to a point in the parish, but within the municipality of Morgan City? The contention of Bisso is that the police jury has such power, while the contention of defendant is that it has no such power.

■ Section 1501 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, which was incorporated in those statutes from the acts of 1855, No. 302, reads as follows: “The police juries of the several parishes of the state (the parish of Orleans excepted), shall have the exclusive privilege of establishing ferries and toll bridges within their respective limits; of fixing the rates of ferriage and toll to be charged thereon, and of generally regulating the police of the same. This privilege shall not extend to any ferries or bridges already established, until the expiration of their charters; nor to any ferries or bridges within the control of municipal corporations; and said police juries shall have the right to lease the ferries within their respective parishes for any number of years, not to exceed five; and the lessees of *127 •said ferries shall give bond and security annually, payable to the president of the police jury, in such sum as may be required, for the ■faithful performance of their duties as public ferrymen.”

This section was amended and re-enacted by Act No. 132 of 1906, so as to authorize the leasing of ferries for a period not exceeding ten years, instead of five, and so as to confirm leases already made for the former period. Section 1501 of the Revised Statutes of 1870 is reproduced verbatim in section 2743 of those statutes. This section was amended and re-enacted by Act No. 234 of 1928, though .not until after the franchises here involved were granted, so as to confer the right on municipal corporations, having bridges or ferries within their control, to waive their jurisdiction over them in favor of police juries.

The charter of Morgan City is Act No. 7 of 1876. Section 15 of that act confers on the mayor and city council the entire control of the banks of Bayou Boeuf and Berwick’s bay, ■or the Atchafalaya river, within the boundaries of the municipality, so far as consistent with the laws of the United States, and .section 12 thereof reads as follows, to wit: “That from and after the passage of this act the powers of the police jury of the parish of St. Mary shall cease and determine within said Morgan City, and the mayor and council shall possess all the powers within said corporation which have been heretofore exercised by the police jury, and that the inhabitants and property within the corporate limits of said Morgan City shall be exempt from the payment of all parish taxes.” Section 12 of the act of 1876, just quoted, occurs verbatim in Act No. 102 of 1860, the original charter of Morgan City, by which the municipality was incorporated under the name of Brashear, and appears there as section 6, and thence it was carried, word for woi'd, into Act No. 99 of 1871, the second charter of the town of Bra-shear. Hence the section appears in all,the charters that. Morgan City has had, including the present one, or Act No. 7 of 1876.

When Morgan City was incorporated in I860, as the town of Brashear, Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 308, 169 La. 122, 1929 La. LEXIS 1951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisso-v-mayor-and-councilmen-of-morgan-city-la-1929.