City of Russell v. Ironton-Russell Bridge Co.

60 S.W.2d 628, 249 Ky. 307, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 890
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 6, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 628 (City of Russell v. Ironton-Russell Bridge 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 Russell v. Ironton-Russell Bridge Co., 60 S.W.2d 628, 249 Ky. 307, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 890 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Coret by

Derby, Commissionee

Affirming.

By appropriate steps the city of Russell, hereinafter called the city, sought to make an extension of its territorial limits, a remonstrance was filed by the Iron-ton-Rnssell Bridge Company, hereinafter called the Bridge Co., and the city, having been nnsnccessfnl, has appealed. The territory proposed to be annexed is a part of the territory sought to 'be annexed in Gilley et al. v. City of Russell, 212 Ky. 798, 280 S. W. 101, and much said there is applicable here, nevertheless we have re-examined and reconsidered the question.

Russell is a fourth class city, it was proceeding-under section 3483, Ky. Stats., and the steps taken were in strict accord with the statute.

The strip sought to be annexed is thus described:

“Beginning at a point at low water in the Ohio River at the north corner of Lot No. 13, of the plat of Rice & Kidds addition to Russell in Greenup County, Kentucky, dated August, 1909, and recorded in- Book 39, last page, said point being in the west line of Rice and Kidds purchase and the west side line of Yernon Street produced to low water line, and also the west corporate line of the City of *309 Bussell thence southeasterly along and with low water line of the Ohio Biver and the present corporation line of the City of Bussell, Kentucky, 4,750 feet more or less to the mouth of Bear Bun at the east corporation line of the city of Bussell, Kentucky, thence crossing the Ohio Biver N 60 W 1020 feet more or less to low water line of said Ohio Biver on the Ohio side of same; thence northwesterly along and with low water line on the Ohio side of the river 4,750 feet; thence S 60 W 900 feet more or less to the point of beginning.”

In other words, the city is seeking to annex that part of the Ohio river which lies immediately in front of it. The present boundary of the city as fixed by chapter 591 of Loe. & Priv. Acts 1873-74 is:

“Beginning on the Ohio Biver at the mouth of a creek, at lower end of earner’s G-rove; thence south sixty-two degrees west to the top of the ridge of the river hill; thence in a southern direction along the top of said ridge and down the hill to Bear: Bun; thence down the meanderings of same to the Ohio Biver; thence down the Ohio river to the place of beginning.”

The contention of the city is that as the territory between the low-water mark on the Kentucky shore and the thread of the stream is, so the city says, already within the corporate limits of the city of Bussell by reason of. the description in the act of 1874, which, it argues, is for all practical purposes exactly “.on all. fours” with the act construed in the Covington Bridge Cases (City of Covington v. State Tax Com. et al., 231 Ky. 606, 21 S. W. (2d) 1010), as applied to the northern or Ohio river boundary of said city, and, it further appearing that the Bridge Co. is, so the city contends, only a trespasser on property owned by the state of Kentucky and Greenup county, that it is therefore, as the city views it, not an “owner” of real estate within the purview of section 3483, Ky. Stats., and, consequently, as the city insists, not qualified under the statute to make any objections.

We are not called on in this case to say what is the northern boundary of the city, and hence we are expressing no ..opinion on that subject. Admitting, for *310 the sake of argument only, that the city -is right, what difference does it make?

The Bridge Co. owns this bridge spanning the Ohio river. The bridge is either real or personal property. If personal property, it is in its entirety taxable at the site of the chief office of the Bridge Co., which is in •Russell, Ky. Prom the maps in this record it appears that something like 600 or 700 feet of this bridge and the approach to it is south of the low-water mark on the Kentucky side of the river, and the Bridge Co. admits that is real estate, and so lists it, and the Bridge Co. is so taxed thereon by the city of Russell. The property is so listed and taxed, and the city tax imposed and collected thereon, in 1930, was $984. As one walks across this bridge from Russell over to Ironton, Ohio, a point is finally reached, where the northern boundary of the city of Russell is crossed, whether this is at the point where the bridge crosses the low-water mark on the Kentucky side of the river or at the point where it crosses the thread of the stream in the river, makes no difference and we express no opinion regarding the location of that , point, but until that point is reached this bridge is admittedly real property, and, as there is no difference in the nature of the bridge north of that point from that south of that point, wherever that point may be, and as the Bridge Co. owns all the bridge, it follows the Bridge Co. owns real estate beyond the present limits of Russell and within the territory proposed to be annexed, and that it is qualified to oppose this annexation as the “owner of real estate in the limits of the proposed extension.”

The city bottoms its contention upon this which it alleges in its brief has been adopted as the rule in Kentucky: “That the ability of the city to impose, and the liability of property to be compelled to pay city taxes is not enough to prevent a proposed annexation.” We shall examine the authorities cited to see if such a rule has been adopted.

In Summers et al. v. Town of Elsmere, 55 S. W. 682, 21 Ky. Law Rep. 1525, there had been a town site platted and laid out on both sides of the Q. & C. Railway. There were four principal streets leading through this town site to the Lexington turnpike. The territory south of the railroad had been incorporated as- the town *311 of Elsmere, and thereafter it undertook to annex the territory north of the railway which was called ‘ ‘ South Erlanger,” and was a part of this same town site and used these same streets. To reach the Lexington pike the inhabitants of Elsmere had to pass through South Erlanger, and would he compelled to improve these streets to reach the pike. The drainage of South Er-langer passed through Elsmere, and the town of Els-mere would have to take care of that. The property in South Erlanger would benefit thereby and should help pay therefor.

The remonstrants there had but one defense, and that was they did not want to pay city taxes, and under that state of facts this court held that defense insufficient to prevent the annexation.

In Yancey et al. v. Town of Fairview, 66 S. W. 636, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 2087, the proof showed that every lot within the boundary of the town, as it existed when the ordinance of annexation was enacted, had been built upon and was occupied but three, and that less than 75 per cent, of the freeholders in the territory proposed to be annexed had remonstrated, the town’s only chance to grow was by annexing more territory, and we held the payment of city taxes was. not sufficient, under those circumstances, to prevent the annexation.

In City of Ludlow v. Ludlow et al., 186 Ky. 246, 216 S. W. 596, the city proposed to annex a tract of land 533 feet wide and 1,255 feet long fronting on the Lud-low highway, surrounded by the city of Ludlow on the north and west and by the city of Covington upon the south and east.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 628, 249 Ky. 307, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-russell-v-ironton-russell-bridge-co-kyctapphigh-1932.