Central Kentucky Traction Co. v. City of Winchester

191 S.W. 636, 173 Ky. 806, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 525
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 13, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 191 S.W. 636 (Central Kentucky Traction Co. v. City of Winchester) 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
Central Kentucky Traction Co. v. City of Winchester, 191 S.W. 636, 173 Ky. 806, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 525 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

On September 7th, 1906, a street railway franchise was granted by the city of Winchester, a city of the fourth class, to the Central Kentucky Traction Company. The franchise contained the following agreement upon the part of the traction company, which is the basis of this action:

“Should the city at any time, from time to time, change the material of the streets through which said railroad runs through said city are constructed, or the grade thereof, and reconstruct or rebuild said streets or any portion of them, with brick or other material than macadam, of which they are now constructed, said purchaser or his assigns on the demand of the city council shall rebuild or reconstruct the space between the rails of its road and for eighteen inches on each side of said rails through said portions of said streets which are thus rebuilt or reconstructed by the city, with the same kind of material used by the city and such portions of said streets so reconstructed by the said purchaser or his assigns shall be made at the expense of said purchaser or his assigns and to conform in all respects with the remainder of said street so constructed by the city.
“9th. If said grantees shall ever at any time fail to promptly and fully conform and comply with any duty or obligation herein imposed, then the said city of Winchester may, at its option, proceed to perform and execute the same at the cost and expense of said grantee, and the said grantee shall immediately become and remain liable to the city of Winchester for any and all loss, expense, cost or damage; ten days’ notice, however, of such failure and of the thing required to be done shall first be given the grantee.”

[808]*808After this franchise was granted, and before the passage of the ordinance hereinafter referred to, the Central Kentucky Traction Company was consolidated with the Kentucky Traction and Terminal Company. Under section 3572, Kentucky Statutes, which is a part of the charters of cities of. the fourth class, such cities are authorized and empowered to make such improvements as were made here, at the exclusive cost of the abutting property owners, and, under this authority, the city council of Winchester, in May, 1912, regularly passed an ordinance providing, in conformity with the law, for the paving, with brick, of the streets of the city, including a portion of Main street, which, alone, is involved here, and providing that the cost and expense of this improvement, in accordance with the specifications therein set out, should be at the exclusive cost of the abutting property owners, to be apportioned, by the city engineer and board of council, according to the number of front feet owned by the owners respectively, with liens upon such property to secure payment of the amounts thus apportioned.

No question is made, that the ordinance was not regularly passed; that the work was not done, by the contractors to whom the contract was awarded, according to the contract; that the work was not received by the city, and the liability of abutting property owners fixed for their respective apportionments, with liens attaching to their respective properties, to secure such apportionments. After the passage of this ordinance, and in accordance therewith, the city, on the 2nd day of August, 1912, contracted with Daniels, Lyst & Douglas, the successful bidder, for the reconstruction of the said street. On September 16th, 1912, the mayor of the city caused to be served upon appellant, a written notice, which is as follows:

“September 10th, 1912.
“Central Kentucky Traction Co., City.
“Gentlemen:—
“You are hereby notified that the board of council of the city of Winchester, has, by ordinance duly adopted, directed that Main street between the C. & O. E. E. and B'oone avenue in this city, be improved by original construction, by paving with vitrified brick.
[809]*809“One section of said ordinance is as follows:
“The street railway track shall be composed of seven (7) inch girder street car rails, on the best quality of sawed white oak ties, six inches deep, seven inches wide and seven feet long. The sub-grade shall be excavated to a depth of seventeen (17) inches. The ties shall be spaced three feet center to center. The ties shall rest on a bed of concrete four (4) inches thick and be filled between and over and at the ends with concrete as shown on plan in city engineer’s office. The concrete shall be of the same quality as for paving foundation. The price in the proposal shall cover excavating foundation, locking up track, putting in concrete and completing the paving between tracks and eighteen inches outside of each rail. The street railway company to furnish rails, connections, spikes and ties, and lay ties and rail.
“And that you are expected to comply with the conditions as set out in your franchise by which you are to construct that part of the street between the rails and within eighteen inches on either side thereof.
“(Signed) J. A. Hughes,
“Mayor of the city of Winchester, Ky.
“This Sept. 10th, 1912.”

Before the service of this notice, the contractors had begun work on that portion of Main street involved in this controversy, but whether upon that portion of the street that appellant, under the franchise, was required to construct, is not entirely free from doubt, as there is some conflict in the evidence upon that point, but certain it is, that no work of any consequence had then been done, upon that part of the street for the construction of which appellant was liable. Appellant paid no attention to the notice, did not offer or express a desire to do the work itself, which under the franchise it had the option, under certain conditions, to perform, but stood by and watched the contractors perform the work according to the city’s specifications, and saw the city receive the work, without objection of any kind, except that, upon the day the notice was served upon it, when waited upon informally by some of the members of the city council, at its office in Lexington, the vice president and chief officer in Kentucky of the railway company, Mr. Bacon, stated, according to his version: “We declined construction of that type, as it was an obsolete type of construction and unduly expensive, and a type [810]*810of construction that we had discontinued the use of for years before, and that we did not consider either proper or good construction for this city, and that we could not proceed with the work of that character. ’ ’ According to the version of the city attorney, who was present, Mr. OBacon stated, the company was going to decline to have anything to do with it, because he had concluded, after consulting with its engineer, that the foundation required was not sufficient to support the track.

"Whether the reason was as stated by Mr. Bacon, or as stated by Mr. Haggard, the city attorney, there is no question but that the company did refuse to construct that part of the street included between the rails and eighteen inches on either side of the track.

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22 S.W. 558 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 636, 173 Ky. 806, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-kentucky-traction-co-v-city-of-winchester-kyctapp-1917.