Dennis Long & Co. v. City of Louisville

32 S.W. 271, 98 Ky. 67, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 271 (Dennis Long & Co. v. City of Louisville) 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
Dennis Long & Co. v. City of Louisville, 32 S.W. 271, 98 Ky. 67, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 18 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JUDGE GRACE

delivered the opimon of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Jefferson Cir[71]*71cuit Court, wherein it was adjudged that the city of Louisville is the owner of a perpetual easement in and right of way over a certain strip of land then in the possession of Dennis Long & Co. (an incorporated company), said strip-of land being of an average width of thirty-seven and one-half feet and extending from Jackson street on the east to Preston street on the west, being a distance of five hundred and thirty-one feet. Said judgment declaring the right of the city of Louisville in this strip of ground in itself and its assignees to construct, maintain and operate a railroad with such tracks and other appurtenances to a railroad as may be desirable, over and upon and along said strip and with the right for the purposes aforesaid to the exclusive possession of said land, and to such other rights therein as were acquired by the said city in the property condemned by it in the case of the City of Louisville v. Joseph Hall and others in the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas, decided in 1873. The judgment concludes by ordering Dennis Long & Co. to remove from said strip of land all fences and other obstructions that have been placed upon said strip by defendant or those under whom it claims, within thirty days from the date of the judgment.

Plaintiff’s claim is founded solely on certain condemnation'proceedings instituted by it in the Jefferson Court of Common Pleas, in the spring of 1873, style, City of Louisville v. Hall and others. A full and complete copy of the record in that case is filed as an exhibit in this case by plaintiff, and made part of its petition. As introductory to that suit, plaintiff’s counsel in their brief say: “That sometime prior to May, 1872, the city of Louisville agreed with the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company that if it would remove its depot and tracks from Jefferson [72]*72street over to a location near the river, and following the general course of the old bed of Beargrass Creek, the city would condemn and furnish to the company a right of way and depot grounds in that locality. Accordingly, on May 18,1872, an ordinance was passed by the city council directing the institution of condemnation proceedings, in the name of the city for the purpose just mentioned and along the general route just described.”

The right of the city of Louisville to condemn property lor municipal purposes is laid under this clause found in an ■act of the legislature of Kentucky, amending the charter of the city which took effect March, 1872, and is as follows, viz:

“■Whenever, in the opinion of the general council, property should be needed for municipal purposes, either within the boundaries of the city or the county of Jefferson, said council may, by ordinance, order the condemnation of such property.” This act is quoted by counsel for the city and no other authority is referred to. The ordinance under which the proceedings were instituted is copied into the original case and reads as follows:

“An ordinance for the condemnation of ground and improvements for the purpose of making a road-bed for the Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railroad.

“Section 1. Be it ordained by the general council of the city of Louisville, That the city attorney be and he is hereby directed to institute the necessary proceedings for the condemnation of such property as may be needed in order to construct a road-bed from the line of the Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railroad, north to Pocahontas street, thence along said street to Beargrass Creek bed and along the line of Beargrass Creek bed and Water street, west to [73]*73First street, as designated in the map of the city engineer as No. 3, upon the above described route.

“Approved May 18, 1872.

Signed, “JNO. G-. BANTER, Mayor.”

This ordinance- was filed with the original suit and with same a map was filed marked Exhibit No. 2, made part of that suit and copied into this record. Plaintiff said in that suit “that from the point where the said road-bed strikes the bed of Beargrass Creek along the designated line, the space required will vary from 120 feet in width to 40 feet in width, according to the map here filed and made part hereof.” Again the petition says “the space and quantity of ground required from each of the above named owners is minutely and accurately set out and described in said map, and as being within the red lines.”

In the original suit of condemnation proceedings, Dennis Long -was made a party defendant and the statement was made in the petition that he was one of the owners of the lands sought to be condemned. To that petition Dennis Long filed an answer showing that he was the owner of four lots of ground fronting on Fulton street (north of Beargrass Creek and Water street), about three hundred and eighty feet, and running back to the center thread of the ancient bed of Beargrass Creek, as described in one deed, and to the old bed of Beargrass Creek in the other deed.

In said answer Dennis Long filed the deeds under which he claimed and owned the property sought to be condemned, lying as it did between Jackson street on the- east, and Preston street on the west. These deeds showed a considera: tion paid by Long for this property of $34,200, and in addition he gave a detailed history of the valuable improvements he had made on same, their location, and the use to which they were applied, Long being a foundryman and [74]*74owning and operating on said property a large foundry, then chiefly devoted to making iron pipes, the annual business of said Long being then estimated at $800,000, and declaring his purpose to be, and that the demands for his products required him, to further extend the capacity of his works to $i,500,000 per annum. And said answer pointed out specifically how and why the property he owned, and every foot of it, was necessary for his purposes, an„d showing that same could not be taken from him for any purpose without great damage to his entire possessions and business.

To this answer no reply was ever filed, and the only thing shown by the record in reference to Dennis Long, and as a termination of the suit to condemn any of his property, is, that on the 28th day of May. after the jury had been sworn and when a part only of the evidence had been heard, “the-plaintiff comes by its attorney and on its motion it is ordered that this cause be discontinued as to the defendant Dennis Long.”

As said, this order was made before the finding of the jury, and before any judgment of condemnation was rendered by the court.

So that whatever may have been the rights acquired by the city of Louisville in that case, or whatever may have been done or adjudged in that suit, Dennis Long, not being a party to it, is not bound by it.

Certainly neither his property nor his possession was ever condemned by that proceeding.

There was no adjudication in that suit that a foot of his property was needed for the purpose of building this railway track for the Louisville, Cincinnati and Lexington Railway Company, nor was any of same taken for that purpose, nor was any easement established or declared in favor-[75]*75of said railway or the city over his property or possessions, nor was any compensation made him therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 271, 98 Ky. 67, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-long-co-v-city-of-louisville-kyctapp-1895.