DuPont v. Charleston Bridge Co.

44 S.E. 86, 65 S.C. 524, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 86 (DuPont v. Charleston Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DuPont v. Charleston Bridge Co., 44 S.E. 86, 65 S.C. 524, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 59 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The Charleston Bridge Company was chartered by an act of the legislature, December 17th, 1808 (9 Stat., 434), for the purpose of establishing a bridge over Ashley River from the parish of St. Philip to the parish of St. Andrews; and authority was given to the corporators to establish also a turnpike road from the terminus of the bridge in the parish of St. Andrews to a point of intersection with another road. The charter was without limit of duration, but required both bridge and road to be completed within seven jrears from its date, and in the meantime the company was allowed to establish a ferry at the place fixed for the construction of the bridge. The bridge was completed in 1810, but was destroyed by a cyclone in 1813. There was no hope that the bridge would be rebuilt, and the legislature in 1815 established a ferry at the same place and vested it in The Charleston Bridge Company for twenty years. In 1834, the charter of the company was renewed for fourteen years, and it was given all the powers and privileges acquired under former acts of the legislature (9 Stat., 601). There was a *527 renewal in 1848 of the authority to conduct a ferry for fourteen years (11 Stat., 525). In 1856, the bridge was rebuilt under the original charter, but was burned by the Confederate army in the evacuation of Charleston in 1865. The company again ran a ferry until 1886, when the bridge was again rebuilt. The General Assembly, on December 21st, 1882, passed an act to revive and renew the charter of the company granted on December 17th, 1834. Either bridge or ferry was open to the public from 1808 to the present, but they were never in operation at the same time. The company, some time prior to 1817, while it was operating the ferry, built its turnpike road over the lands of Mrs. Chalmers without permission. Upon receiving a letter from her, dated October 31st, 1817, demanding a return of her land so used, or payment for it or free passage of the ferry for herself and family and servants, the company sent the following communication in reply: “Your letter of the 31st ult. was this day laid before the board of directors of the bridge company, and the following resolution passed thereon, viz: ‘On application of Mrs. Chalmers, as owner of a plantation through which the turnpike road passes, for the privilege of passing the ferry as consideration for the use of the land and damages, resolved, that the owner of the said plantation,' with his or her carriage horse or horses, and accompanying servants, have the privilege of passing the ferry free of toll. By order of the board. J. M. Davis, Secretary. Charleston, 14 November, 1817.’ ” This arrangement remained in force until Mrs. Chalmers sold the land over which the turnpike road passed to her son, H. J. Chalmers, when the company refused to allow him or her to pass the ferry free, claiming it had merely given a license revocable at will, and that it did not confer any right to cross the ferry without toll upon subsequent owners of the land. Upon this Mrs. Chalmers and her son filed their bill in the Court of Equity, praying for specific performance. This suit resulted in a decree of Chancellor Waties, in which it was held that the perpetual privilege of crossing the ferry free had been granted to the *528 owner of the Geddes Hall plantation, whoever such owner might be, in consideration of the use of the land over which the company’s turnpike passed, and it was not, therefore, a revocable license; and it was decreed “that the defendants and their agents be perpetually restrained from exacting toll for passing their ferry from the complainant, Henry I. Chalmers, the present owner of said land, with his carriage horse or horses, and accompanying servants, subject, however, to any general restrictions which may at any time be established by the said ferry; and that the said complainant and his mother, Sophia Chalmers, do execute a release to defendants of all claim for damages or other compensation on -account of the running of the turnpike road through the said land.” It will be observed no reference is made to free passage of a bridge, and the issue here made was not decided nor anticipated by the decree. There seems to, be no doubt that for all the time the company operated the ferry, the privileges fixed by the decree were allowed to the successive owners of the land without question. The plaintiff is now the owner of the Geddes Hall plantation, and demanded of the company for herself and family and servants the privilege of crossing the bridge free of toll. This demand was 'refused by the company, and the plaintiff on January 4th, 1900, brought this action to enjoin the defendant from charging her any toll for herself, her family, her servants, horses and carriages, asking a decree that the company’s bridge or ferry be forever free to her, her family, servants, horses and carriages, and for judgment for damages for the past denial of her,rights in this regard.

The defendant’s answer really sets up three defenses: First, that the contract made with Mrs. Chalmers in 1817 for herself and the subsequent owners of, the land, and the decree of Chancellor Waties fixing the rights of the parties under that contract, contemplated free passage of the ferry only, and not of the bridge. Second, that if the plaintiff or her husband, who conveyed to her, ever had any license or easement to cross the bridge free of toll, it was lost by abandon *529 ment and waiver. Third, that the claim of the plaintiff is barred by the statute of limitations.

The case was referred to G. H. Sass, Esq., master, who reported that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought, and recommended judgment in her favor for $1,495 damages. His Honor, Judge Townsend, upon hearing the cause, overruled the exceptions on both sides and confirmed the report in a formal decree. The case is submitted to this Court on exceptions by defendant, which cover the defenses above stated. It is hardly necessary to say that the decree of Chancellor Waties construing the original contract is absolutely binding as far as it. goes in this case, because the defendant was a party to the cause in which it was made, and the plaintiff is claiming through another party to that cause, but the precise question made here was not then in issue. The great lapse of time since it was made, as we shall hereafter endeavoi' to show, does not in the least impair its force in this regard, unless in the meantime the parties themselves have by some act or omission defeated the right which the decree conferred.

1 The first defense that free passage over its ferry did not mean free passage over its bridge raises an interesting issue. The bridge company, in 1817, the date of the contract, and also in 1820, the date of the decree, was operating a ferry only, but it had a charter to establish a bridge whenever it saw fit. It was almost absolutely necessary for the purposes of either enterprise that it should retain the road through the Geddés Hall plantation. It is true, that no bridge was contemplated in 1817, when the contract was made, or for many years after, but both parties well knew the road would be needed if the bridge ever should be rebuilt. The ferry was chartered and established merely as a substitute for the bridge, and they were never in use at the same time.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 86, 65 S.C. 524, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-charleston-bridge-co-sc-1903.