Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Trimble

451 S.W.2d 641, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 23, 1969
StatusPublished

This text of 451 S.W.2d 641 (Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Trimble) 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
Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. Trimble, 451 S.W.2d 641, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 18 (Ky. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

The appellees, Greer-Ellison Coal Company and the trustees of the James Hatch-er Estate, brought this action against the state highway department and certain of its officials for injunctive relief and damages. The relationship between the appel-lees is that the company has a coal lease from the Hatcher estate on some 6,000 acres of land just east of U.S. Highway 23 and the Big Sandy River in Floyd County. Their complaint is that the highway department has declined to issue a permit to the company for the construction of an overhead conveyor spanning Highway 23 between the Hatcher land on the east and the site of a railroad siding procured by the company on the west side of the highway and the river. Cf. KRS 177.106.

The trial court entered findings of fact, conclusions of law and an interlocutory judgment declaring the company entitled to the permit. The judgment was made ap-pealable as authorized by CR 54.02, and the highway department appeals. Our conclusions are that the appellees are not entitled to the permit as a matter of right, that the highway department’s action was not arbitrary, and that the conclusions of law and judgment are erroneous.

Despite a rather ample record, the facts are relatively simple. Beginning in 1964 the coal company spent or committed considerable sums of money incident to the establishment of a coal mine on the Hatcher estate property, which abuts the east side of Highway 23. Among other things, it made tests, acquired leases, negotiated a contract to sell its entire output to a power company, obtained a site across the river for a railroad siding, and advanced half the estimated costs of its construction. In June of 1966 the highway department conducted a public hearing at Prestonsburg to establish the location of a new four-lane highway under the federal Appalachian Highway Program. It was determined at the hearing that the corridor for the highway would, in this area, follow the course of Highway 23, and soon thereafter the highway department contracted with Carl Kroboth Engineers for the design. Pursuant to this contract the engineers on April 17, 1967, established a tentative alignment for the center line of the highway.

Meanwhile, on August 8, 1966, engineers representing the coal company initiated a discussion with representatives of the highway department for the purpose of obtaining an encroachment permit (KRS 177.-106) for the construction of a conveyor over Highway 23 near the mouth of Ivy Creek and were advised to file an application showing the plan and location of the proposed structure. The coal company proceeded to complete its engineering plans and filed a formal application on February 20, 1967. There followed a series of meetings between the respective representatives of the coal company and the highway department, during the course of which a new or amended application was filed, but they culminated in a stalemate when the coal company refused to sign an agreement under which one of the conditions of the permit would require it to relocate the structure at its own expense when necessitated by the construction of the new highway.

This suit was filed on April 11, 1967. The complaint asked a mandatory injunction requiring the highway department to grant a permit for the construction of a bridge-conveyor over existing Highway 23 just north of the mouth of Ivy Creek and demanded money damages on the theory of [643]*643reverse condemnation for the reduction in value to the plaintiffs’ property rights caused by the allegedly wrongful delay in issuing such a permit. The highway department, after moving for a dismissal, filed an answer in which, among other things, it stated its willingness to issue the desired permit on the condition of the plaintiffs’ agreeing to remove the structure at their own expense upon reconstruction of the highway.

After the taking and submission of considerable evidence the trial court entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment declaring that the appellees are entitled to the permit and reserving action on the questions of injunctive relief and damages. The pivotal conclusions of law were that under Sections 13 and 242 of the Constitution of Kentucky the plans and preparations made by the appellees prior to the June, 1966, hearing had attained the status of a vested interest “which would justify compensation in the event that such projected plans were impaired,” and “that the proposal of the Department of Highways to construct a four-lane highway across the subject property interfered with the plaintiffs’ respective rights, use and ownership of the land in question, and placed a substantial burden on same.”

An abutting owner does not, in our opinion, have a vested right to build a structure over a public highway.

“None of the authorities, so far as our research has discovered, sanction the right of an abutter to construct and maintain an unauthorized overhead structure across a highway whether it interferes with travel or traffic or not. The public safety for7 bids the unauthorized exercise by the abut-ter of a right to build a bridge or arch across a highway. Without the assent of the duly constituted public officials having authority to grant such assent, any structure erected over a street by an abutter would be an encroachment upon the highway, and a nuisance.” Yale University v. City of New Haven, 104 Conn. 610, 134 A. 268, 272, 47 A.L.R. 667, 673 (1926).

Though a structure extending over a public way may not actually interfere with traffic or travel upon it, in which event it is not a nuisance, if it is placed there without public authority it is a pur-presture. Leitchfield Mercantile Co. v. Commonwealth, 143 Ky. 162, 136 S.W. 639, 642 (1911).

It follows that the constitutional restrictions against the taking of property without just compensation have no application to this case. The only relevant constitutional provision is Section 2, which negates the existence and thus prohibits the exercise of arbitrary power. Perhaps also the equal protection clause of the- 14th •Amendment to the federal constitution could be involved under appropriate circumstances, but they are not presented in this instance.

It is probable, though we need not so decide, that in the due exercise of its police power the state could prohibit absolutely the erection of substantial structures over public highways. As it is, however, the legislature has delegated to the highway department the authority to grant permission under KRS 177.106, which reads:

“(1) Before any person shall proceed to cause or continue or allow to remain in existence any encroachment under, on or over any part of the right of way of a state highway he shall first obtain from the Department of Highways a permit so to do. Any encroachment heretofore or hereafter placed or allowed to continue or remain under, on or over any road which is found by the Department of Highways to be interfering in any way with the safe, convenient and continuous use and maintenance of such road shall upon thirty days notice to the person or to his chief agent by the Department of Highways be removed or relocated by such person at his own expense.

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Related

Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Commonwealth
266 S.W.2d 308 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1954)
Yale University v. City of New Haven
134 A. 268 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1926)
Leitchfield Mercantile Co. v. Commonwealth
136 S.W. 639 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.2d 641, 1969 Ky. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-department-of-highways-v-trimble-kyctapp-1969.