Burnside Land Co. v. Connelly and Lee

291 S.W. 409, 218 Ky. 346, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 409 (Burnside Land Co. v. Connelly and Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnside Land Co. v. Connelly and Lee, 291 S.W. 409, 218 Ky. 346, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 116 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

The right to operate a ferry at the confluence of Cumberland river with South Fork near Burnside, is involved in this suit. As far back as 1858 the predecessors of the appellant, Burnside Land Company, operated a ferry at this place. In 1890 Point Burnside Land Coin-' pany was incorporated and took over the ferry and other property belonging to one Cole and his associates. There^ after the Point Burnside Land Company operated a ferry until 1902, when a new corporation, styled Burnside Land Company, ivas organized, taking over all the property and rights of the old company. In 1890’the county court *348 of Pulaski by proper order granted a twenty year franchise to operate a ferry to the Point Burnside Land Company. This grant is not questioned. When the new corporation was formed in 1902, the ferry franchise was transferred to it, the Pulaski'county court consenting. At that time an order was entered, which, in part, reads:

“Point Burnside Land Company: Sale of Ferry: Order, Bond, etc.
“This day came the Burnside Land Company and produced a conveyance to it from the Point Burnside Land Company of the ferry rights across the Cumberland and South Fork rivers at Burnside, Kentucky, which were granted by this court to the said Burnside Land Company, as shown by order of this court recorded in order book 16, page 31, and on this motion said sale is ratified and now confirmed and the said Burnside Land Company is now adjudged to be substituted to all the rights of said Point Burnside Land Company in and to said ferry rights. ’ ’

The order further recites “that the new company produced a bond in the penal sum of $2,000.00, as required by law, to be executed in lieu of bond of the said Point Burnside Company. . . . The transí erring bond aforesaid is now.ordered to be admitted to record and the clerk will record the same as required by law, and the said Burnside Land Company is now authorized to exercise such ferry right and the franchise as fully and under the same limitations and restrictions as were granted the said Point Burnside Land Company.”

The bond of the new company, made a part of that order, recites the obligators ‘ ‘ do hereby bind themselves ’ ’ with these conditions: “The said Burnside Land Company has become the-purchaser of the Ferry rights across the Cumberland and South Fork rivers at their junction at Burnside,. Kentucky, from the Point Burnside Land Company, and having been authorized by the Pulaski county court to run and operate said ferry right, now if said Burnside Land Company, will keep the- ferry across the said South Fork, and Cumberland river at Burnside, Kentucky, according to law,” they shall be bound. In the same order is incorporated a copy of the original order granting the Point Burnside Land Company the *349 franchise on January 20, 1890, for a period of twenty years. The order then recites:

“Now, on motion of said Point Burnside Land Company, leave is hereby given it to sell and convey said ferry rights to Burnside Land Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Kentucky, provided, however, before such sale shall become effective, the said Burnside Land Company shall execute a covenant with sufficient sureties in lieu of the covenant of the Point Burnside Land Company, as required by law, for the keeping and operation of said ferry.”

There is, however, no order of the county court made in 1902 shown by this record- granting to the Burnside Land Company a franchise to operate a ferry for a period of twenty years from that date, or any franchise at all except it was granted the right and privilege to purchase from the old company the franchise which it had and to operate the ferry under that franchise for the balance of the twenty years which would have expired in 1920. Appellant contends, however, that it had a franchise expiring in 1922, twenty years after it purchased from the Point Burnside Land Company in 1902. Let it be so, and yet appellant company appears not to have had a franchise at the time appellees made application for a ferry franchise in 1925, and this appellant admits in part but says that when its attention was called by letter in 1922, by the judge of the Pulaski county court to the fact that its franchise had expired, it through its agent applied to Judge Tarter, then county judge, to grant an extension of the franchise, and thereupon executed in the office of the county court clerk a bond under section 1908, Kentucky Statutes-, requiring bond to be renewed at least once in every five years, and this bond, with an order approving it written on separate pieces of paper, together with a power of attorney, authorizing the making and the signatures, were pinned to a page of the miscellaneous bond book, in the office of the county court clerk, but no order was made granting or purporting to grant either a franchise to operate the ferry, or to renew the old franchise, or to extend it. However, appellant claims that the county judge to whom its representatives talked concerning the transfer of the franchise -assured *350 its representatives that a franchise would be granted. It also says that on several other occasions between that time and the making of the application for the franchise by appellees,- its representatives had conferred with the county judge concerning its ferry and its right to operate the same, but does not contend that at any time it ever made application for a ferry right or for renewal of any franchise as required by section 1800, et seq., Kentucky Statutes.

Appellees, Connelly and Lee, residents of Burnside, posted notices of their intention to apply to the county court for a ferry right as provided by section 1804. A hearing was had at which appellant was represented, and the 'County court held that appellees were entitled to the franchise and that the rights of appellant company to a franchise had expired and was, therefore, invalid. Thereupon appellant land company prosecuted an appeal to the Pulaski circuit court, pursuant to section 1901. There the ease was again heard and determined in favor of appellees, and from that judgment this appeal is1 prosecuted.

Appellees in their petition for franchise manifested to the court their ownership of a plot of ground at the ferry and their desire to be granted a franchise to operate a ferry at that point. At that time there was no valid franchise for the operation of a ferry at that point in existence and no application made for such franchise. However, after appellees posted their’ notice and filed their application, appellant land company filed a protest with the county court against, granting of a franchise to appellees, averred that it then owned and operated a ferry at that point, and soon thereafter posted a notice that it would apply for a franchise to operate a ferry at-the same place. Its application for the ferry was denied, while that of appellees was sustained by the county court.

Appellant now insists that the application and notice •' made and given by appellees admitted that appellant' ’ then had and operated a ferry at the point in question,-' and is now estopped to deny that it had and has such"' franchise. This contention is ‘based upon the language of the application' made by appellees. It is styled,- ' “Pulaski County; Court v.

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53 S.W.2d 690 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)
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292 S.W. 785 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 409, 218 Ky. 346, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnside-land-co-v-connelly-and-lee-kyctapphigh-1926.