City of Middlesboro v. Kentucky Utilities Co.

35 S.W.2d 877, 237 Ky. 523, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 20, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 877 (City of Middlesboro v. Kentucky Utilities Co.) 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
City of Middlesboro v. Kentucky Utilities Co., 35 S.W.2d 877, 237 Ky. 523, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 632 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

. This equity action was begun by tbe appellant and plaintiff below, city of Middlesboro, filing its petition in tbe Bell circuit court against tbe appellee and defendant below, Kentucky Utilities Company, in which plaintiff averred that defendant was operating an electric lighting system within the corporate limits of plaintiff' and using its streets, alleys, and public ways for that purpose without right, or without having obtained a franchise privilege to do so from the' city under the provisions of section 164 of the Constitution or otherwise, and it prayed that the court so adjudge. If that could not be done, it then asked that defendant be required to carry out the terms of an alleged contract between it and a defunct corporation known as the Middlesboro Town and *525 Lands Company, made and executed on April 17, 1909, under which defendant sought to sustain its right and privilege to appropriate the streets for the operation of its electric lighting system as it was doing, and which the city had requested it to do, but which it failed and refused. That provision related to the fixing and adjusting of the rates to be charged the city and its inhabitants for electricity for both public and private purposes.

Defendant answered, denying that it was operating its plant within the city or using any portion of its streets for that purpose without a franchise to do so, though it admitted that it had never obtained such right from plaintiff in the manner provided by section 164 of our Constitution; but contended that it was obtained by mesne conveyance from its remote vendor, the Middlesboro- Electric Light, Heat & Power Company and that the latter purchased it by deed from the Middlesboro Town Company in 1890, in which the city joined, and whereby such rights and privileges were granted in that inter parties contract to the grantee therein, which was a private corporation organized for the purpose, to use and appropriate the streets of plaintiff in operating an electric lighting system for a term of thirty years from that date on certain terms and conditions not required for the purposes of this case to be recited herein. It was further alleged that the Middlesboro Town Company later conveyed all of its title and right in and to the ground upon which the city of Middlesboro was established to the Middlesboro Town Lands Company, which was of date November 12, 1891, and it, on November 23, 1893, conveyed all of its interest in same to the Middlesboro Town & Lands Company. That the latter on April 17, 1909, as the successor to the Middlesboro Town Company, conveyed to defendant’s predecessor in title an exclusive and perpetual right to use the streets, alleys, and public ways of the city of Middlesboro in the operation of its lighting system, and which the vendor therein had the right to grant under the following facts:

That prior to January 4,1890, the Middlesboro Town Company owned a large body of land where the city of Middlesboro is now located and platted it into lots and streets, and on the day mentioned it acknowledged the plat, which was shortly thereafter recorded in the county clerk’s office of Bell county,' and by that act it expressly dedicated “to public use the streets, alleys, *526 roads and public ways laid off on said plat, ’ ’ but at the same time reserved to itself and successors in title complete control over the streets “for the erection, building, laying and maintenance of public or private telegraph, telephone and electric wires, poles and lines of all kinds, or for public or private gas, or water pipes and mains of all kinds, and for street and other tramroads or railroads; or for cisterns, wells, pumps, fountains, sewers or drains, or for curbing, grading’, making, paving, or macadamizing any or all such streets, alleys, roads, pavements or public ways, or for straightening creeks or water channels; or for making or maintaining any and all public or private improvements necessary or proper in the judgment of said Town Company, its successors or assigns for the said Town of Middlesboro or the citizens thereof the said Town Company not intending however, to bind itself to make any of said public or private improvements and the said Middlesboro Town Company does hereby declare that the said plat is the same to which reference has been made in all conveyances by it heretofore made.”

It was therefore averred and contended that the vendor in the 1909 contract, having succeeded to such perpetual right in the manner indicated, conveyed to defendant’s predecessor (Middlesboro Electric Light, Heat & Power Co.), such perpetual and excluisve right which, as further alleged, became vested in the Middlesboro Town Company by and through its reservation referred to before the formulation and adoption of our present Constitution, and because of which section 164 of that instrument had no application, since it could not operate retroactively so as to impair the Town Company’s alleged reserved right, or defendant’s alleged contract right.

Plaintiff’s reply contained some denials, and (a) attacked the sweeping reservations relied on as being contrary to public policy and void; and (b) that, long prior to the execution or acknowledgment of the reservations, and their recordation with the plat, the Middlesboro Town Company had sold thirteen hundred or more of its lots shown on the plat (and which also contained the streets in the future city of Middlesboro), and in the conveyances of such lots, some of which abutted upon every platted street, reference was made to both plat and street upon which the conveyed lots abutted, and that such plat was extensively circulated and exhibited to such *527 purchasers before the conveyances were made, and all of which was done by the then owner of the land as so platted; that the vendor of such lots, without any such reservations, or without any knowledge on the part of the purchasers that they or any of them would ever thereafter be made, not only made an unqualified dedication of the streets or public ways laid off on the plat from which such purchases were made for the benefit of the vendees in such deed as abutting owners, but likewise made a like dedication to the public of such platted ways, and that the vendor in such conveyances could not impair or curtail the complete dedication thus made by the reservation it attempted thereafter to make as a part of the later recorded plat.

Defendant moved to strike that paragraph of plaintiff’s pleading from its reply, but which was not done at that time, and in a responsive pleading it denied the facts upon which the pleaded estoppel waá based, i. e., that any lots had been sold abutting on platted streets and ways in the manner and with the effect alleged and contended for by plaintiff. Many demurrers and various motions were filed and made by the respective parties, as well as responsive pleadings, and, upon final submission on the pleadings and exhibits, the court struck from plaintiff’s pleading the paragraph in the reply above referred to, relying upon the sale of lots by the Middlesboro Town Company from its plat before the making of the reservation relied on by defendant, in the manner hereinbefore outlined, and held that the reservation, in so far as it applied to the reserved right to use the streets for electric light purposes, was valid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 877, 237 Ky. 523, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-middlesboro-v-kentucky-utilities-co-kyctapphigh-1931.