Carter & Arnold v. Kalfus & Watts

36 Ky. 43, 6 Dana 43, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 2, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 43 (Carter & Arnold v. Kalfus & Watts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter & Arnold v. Kalfus & Watts, 36 Ky. 43, 6 Dana 43, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 136 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The County Court of Jefferson having granted to Kalfus and Waits, a ferry, from a lot of ground in the town of Portland, on the Ohio river, to a point- on the Indiana shore, in the town of Ne.w-Albany — Carter and Arnold, claiming the benefit of a ferry previously established, and in successful and regular operation, near the same. point in Portland, to the opposite shore, ánd who therefore opposed the grant to Kalfus and Watts, have brought the case to this Court by appeal.

A ferry is a fran.chise incident to the land; the establishment of a ferry across the Ohio, is expensive, &. the grant is founded on a valuable consideration; andtho’ it does not imply that there shall beno other’ similar grant in any event,it does imply that no subsequent grant impairing its value can be made, unless the pub-lie interest requires it. And—

[44]*44The first question presented for consideration, is whether the appellants have any legal right to ask a reversal of the order granting ferry privileges to the appelleesAnd this question is vexed and difficult; and, so far as we know, has never, been judicially determined. The proper answer to it, depends on two propositions: first. Is any private right of the appellants injuriously affected by the order of the County Court? and, secondly — is the discretion of County Courts, in establishing ferries, where they have any discretion — absolute and uncontrollable?

The third section of an act of assembly of 1806 (1 Stat. Law, 710,) expressly conferred on the County Courts of counties bordering on the Ohio river, power 4‘ to establish ferries’ across the said river, to the oppo- “ site shore, where the same may, by them, be deemed 44 necessary,” with a proviso restricting the power to one mile, afterwards extended to a mile and a half, above or below a previously established ferry, unless there should be a towm or impassable stream within the prescribed distance, or unless there should be an established ferry on the opposite side of the river.

Had there been no town including the point at which the County Court established the new ferry, there could be no doubt that, according to the facts exhibited in this case, the appellants would have had a right to demand a reversal of the unauthorized order; because the limitation to the extent of a mile and a half, which would have been violated, was prescribed for the benefit of ferries established on the Ohio river.

But it is argued that, as this case is within one of the exceptions from the prescribed limitation, the discretion of the County Court was unlimited, and cannot be controlled by this Court, and. that, therefore, the appellants have no more right than other persons to complain. We are inclined, however, to a different conclusion.

A ferry on the Ohio river is a franchise incident to land, and which may pass with it. A right to ferriage liL' that to pontage, is valuable property, and requires, on the Ohio river, large expenditures of money by the grantee of the franchise; and though the grant of such a [45]*45franchise does not imply that no other similar franchise shall be afterwards, in any event, granted to any other person, so as to impair the value of the first; yet the first grant, being valuable, and founded on a valuable consideration, should, as we think, be understood as implying that there should be no subsequent grant to another person, impairing its value, unless the public interest should be deemed to require such another and rival franchise.

Tho’ the statutes vesting the County Courts with power to establish ferries across the Ohio, give them an extensive discretion; those courts are hbt intended to be the only organ of the State, or ’ the final arbiters under all circumstances. The discretion allowed to them. — even when exercised in relation to ferries in towns, or other places with in the above proviso, is of a quasi judicial character, and subject to the revision and control of an appellate tribunal. Tho’ the owner of the land at any particular point on the Ohio river, is the only person’ entitled to the grant of a ferry there, he has no right to demand such grant, unless the public convenience requires it. And, though the grantee of a ferry in a town on the Ohio, cannot claim an exclusive right inconsistent with the public inierest, he may object to the establishment of one where the' public interest will not be promoted by it: and in either case, the decision of the county court is subject to the revision and control of the Court of Appeals. But—

[45]*45And this idea is fortified by the fact that the statute of 1806 withholds, with certain exceptions, all power from the County Courts to establish a rival ferry within a prescribed distance of one previously established; for jt is evident that this limitation was imposed only because it was deemed but just to the first grantee, and it is therefore reasonable to infer, that the enumerated exceptions were made only because, in the cases excepted, the public interest might, prima facie, require more than one ferry within a distance of a mile and a half.

If then the public convenience does not require more than one ferry at Portland, it seems to us that the appellants have been injured.

Second. If thus injured, the appellants have, in our opinion, a right to appeal to this Court, and ask a reversal of the act of the County Court, unless the Legislature intended that the County Courts should exercise a personal, capricious and unlimited discretion, in determining whether the public interest requires more than one ferry in a town on the Ohio river.

And we are unwilling to concede any such anomaly. It is, we think, more reasonable - to presume that the discretion conceded to the County. Courts was intended to be quasi judicial, and that, though extensive discretion is properly conceded to the County Courts, they were not intended to be the only organ of the State, and the sole and final arbiter under all circumstances; and this deduction is, in no slight degree, fortified by the fact that, though the?general statute of 1796, regulating the estabr lishment of ferries within this State, authorized the Gounty Courts to establish ferries ‘‘ whenever they (should) deem it necessarynevertheless, a subsequent general en[46]*46actment of 1798, authorized an unsuccessful applicant for a ferry from a point included within his own land, to appeal to this Court, and assign errors in fact as well as errors in law. Such an enactment would have been nugatory if the discretion of the County Court had been deemed final and uncontrollable. And moreover, giving the right to appeal, and to assign errors in fact, presupposes, as we 'are inclined to think, a recognition of a pre-existent right to prosecute a writ of error, and assign errors in law.

The discretion of the county courts being, by the statutes, extensive, will be controlled by the court of appeals, only in cases of palpable abuse.

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Crittenden County v. McConnell
36 S.W.2d 627 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)
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31 S.W.2d 932 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
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6 N.Y. 522 (New York Court of Appeals, 1852)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 43, 6 Dana 43, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-arnold-v-kalfus-watts-kyctapp-1837.