Dickey v. Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co.

37 Ky. 113, 7 Dana 113, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 22, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 113 (Dickey v. Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co.) 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
Dickey v. Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co., 37 Ky. 113, 7 Dana 113, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 110 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The only question presented for consideration in this case, is whether Milus W. Dickey, as the contractor for carrying the United States’ Mail from Maysville to Lexington, in this State, has the right, in execution of his engagement, to transport the mail in stage coaches on the turnpike road between those termini, without paying, to the use of the Turnpike Company, the rate of tollage exacted by it, under the authority of its charter, from other persons for the transit of their horses and carriages.

All national power should belong exclusively to the general or national government. And, as nothing can be more national than the regular and certain diffusion of intelligence among the people of the United States through the medium of the public mail, therefore, the power “to establish post offices and post roads” is expressly delegated by the federal constitution to the Congress of the United States; and that power being necessarily exclusive, plenary, and supreme, no State can constitutionally do, or authorize to be done, any act which may frustrate, counteract, or impair, the proper and effectual exercise of it by national authority. From these axiomatic truths it follows, as a plain corollary, that the general government has the unquestionable and uncontrollable right to transport the national mail whenever and wherever the National Congress, in the constitutional exercise of its delegated power over post offices and post roads, shall have prescribed. But full and exclusive and sovereign as this power must be admitted to be, it is not unlimited. It cannot appropriate private property to [114]*114public use without either the consent of the owner, or the payment of a just compensation for the property, or for the use of it. If the general government may constitutionally use a private way, or establish a post road through the lands, or a post office in the house, of a private person, any person whose property shall be thus taken or used for public benefit, may lawfully demand a just compensation for the property, or for the use of it; the federal constitution expressly secures it to him by interdicting the appropriation of private property to public use, without the owner’s consent, or just compensation.

So fur as the designation and use of any State road as a post route, may be concerned, the power to establish post roads cannot im port more than the precedent power to esta Impost offices, and transport the mails — excepting only,that theone implies only a right of use, upon just and common terms, as long only as a stale shall choose to continuearoad as a State road, and the other may imply a right in congress, not only to enjoy the like use, but to continue, as a post route, a road once adop ted or designated or established as a post road, even after it shall have been discontinued as a State road. Unless Congress shall elect to exert its right of eminent domain, and buy a Slate road, or make one, or help to make or repair it, the constitution gives no authority to use it as a post road, without tito consent of the State, or owner, or without making a just compensation for the use. And, therefore— Even if the Lexington & Mays-ville turnpike should be deemed a public t'tate road in all respects, and if the mail contractor has a right to transport thorn on any public road he may pre fer or choose to adopt, between Lexington and Maysville,he can notdoso,norhad Congress power to authorize him to do so,without paying fortheuse if demanded, a just compensation, and that is —prima facie at least — what other persons are required to pay, for a similar use of it.

[114]*114Having been constructed by an association of individuals incorporated into a private body politic by an act of the Kentucky Legislature, which gave the corporation the right to charge tolls, according to a prescribed scale, in consideration of the appropriation of its own funds to the construction of the road for the public benefit — the turnpike road from Maymlle to Lexington should be deemed private property, so far as the value of the franchise and the right to preserve it, as conferx-ed by the charter in the nature of a contract, may be concerned. And therefoi’e, the public — whether it be Kentucky or the United States — can have no constitutional right to use the road without contributing, to its reparation and pi’eservation, either a just compensation for the use, or the rate of tollage pi-esci'ibed by the coi’poration under the sanction of its chartei-. By authorizing the company to exact a fixed compensation for the use of the road, the charter interfered with or impaired the power to carry the mail wherever Congi’ess should elect to carry it, no moi-e ‘nor otherwise than it obstructed or impaired the right of every freeman to ti’avel on any public way he might choose thus to use.

Had Congress designated this road as the mail route from Maysville to Lexington, the right to use it as such would have been subject to the condition of paying, either a just compensation, or the toll which every citizen is requii'ed to pay; for the road would still have been the property of the corporation, and the burthen of repairing it, when dilapidated by the horses and coaches [115]*115of the mail contraeter, would have devolved on the stockholders. There is no restriction, as to locality, on the federal power to establish post offices and post roads. But the right to use private property for a mail route, as for any other national purpose, being qualified by the constitutional condition, that a just compensation be made for the use, unless the owner shall voluntarily waive it, the power to establish post offices and post roads wherever Congress deem it expedient to establish them, though exclusive and supreme, does not, therefore, imply an authority to take or to use, for that purpose, the land or the house of a citizen, or the rail road or McAdamised road of associated citizens, without paying to the owner or owners a just compensation.

The turnpike road between Maysville and Lexington is the property of the stockholders, in the same sense in which the rail road between Lexington and Frankfort is the property of the Company whose money constructed it. The only difference is, that the rail road company is not required by its charter to permit any person to use its road otherwise than for transportation in its own vehicles, and the charter of the turnpike company requires it to permit all persons, who may desire to use its road for transportation or travel, to do so, in their own way — on foot, on their own horses, or with their own carraiges — by paying a prescribed toll. And can it be doubted that the United States would have no constitutional right to use, as a mail route, the rail road between Lexington and Frankfort, without the consent of its owners, or without paying them for the use a reasonable compensation? He who doubts on that subject, would be chargeable with palpable inconsistency, unless he should also doubt whether his own house might not be taken and used as a post office without his consent and without any compensation; for the power to establish post offices and the power to establish post roads are commensurable, and the one is as sovereign and unlimited as the other, and not, in any sense or in any degree, more so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 113, 7 Dana 113, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickey-v-maysville-washington-paris-lexington-turnpike-road-co-kyctapp-1838.