George T. Stagg Co. v. Frankfort Modes Glass Works

194 S.W. 333, 175 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 320
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 1, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 333 (George T. Stagg Co. v. Frankfort Modes Glass Works) 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
George T. Stagg Co. v. Frankfort Modes Glass Works, 194 S.W. 333, 175 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 320 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing each judgment.

The appellant, George T. Stagg Company, a corporation, and plaintiff below, filed its separate petition in the Franklin circuit court against the several appellees’ defendants in the .first ten cases appearing in the caption, claiming to be the owner of a six-inch water pipe line running from a natural spring located about two and a half or three miles north of the city of Frankfort to the northern corporate limits of the city, and alleging [332]*332that the defendants in each of those suits who own separate lots or parcels of land through which or near which the pipe line ran had wrongfully and illegally tapped it, and were without right appropriating and using water therefrom on their respective premises, or that they were claiming the right'to do so. Injunctive relief was sought against each of them to prevent those who were using the water from continuing to do so and to compel them to disconnect their respective service pipes and to abandon the use of the water.

In the suit against the defendant, Nuchols, who claims the right to the use of the water for domestic purposes, an injunction was sought to prevent him from exercising his alleged right to tap the pipe as it was claimed he was threatening to do.

The separate answers of the ten defendants denied that the plaintiff owned or held title to the six-inch water main, and claimed that each of them through whose lots it ran were the owners of it and consequently had a right to tap it. Another paragraph relied upon the fact, as therein alleged, that each defendant and those through whom he claimed had been adversely using’ the water and appropriating it for domestic purposes for a period of more than fifteen years next before the filing of the suit against him in such an open, notorious, hostile and adverse manner as to acquire a title or right in and to the character of use of the water sought to be enjoined.

Still another paragraph seeks to invoke the defense of champerty in that it is alleged, in each of the cases, that at the time the plaintiff acquired its alleged title to the water main in question the defendants were using the water in the adverse mánner set out in the second paragraph of their respective answers. Appropriate pleadings put in issue the affirmative parts of the answers. The ten cases were consolidated in the court below, and after extensive preparation they were submitted and the trial court dismissed each of the ten petitions, and from that judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal. '

The eleventh and last suit in the caption was brought in the Franklin circuit court by "William Quarles and wife against the appellant in the other ten cases, George T. Stagg Company, to enjoin it from laying a six-inch pipe from the Frankfort and Owenton pike up Cove Spring branch so as to connect with a pipe running from [333]*333a reservoir wkick is supplied witk water from Cove Spring, and wkick spring and reservoir is now owned ky tke appellant, and kas keen owned by it and its vendors for a great number of years, tke spring and a part of tke ground covered by tke reservoir having been acquired by its remote vendor, tke city of Frankfort, in 1838.

The grounds for tke relief sought by tke Quarles suit are tkat plaintiffs tkerein were tke owners of tke land upon wkick tke pipe was being laid, and tkat tke appellant, in attempting to lay it at tkat place was doing so without tke consent of the plaintiffs and was, therefore, a trespasser.

Tke answer denied tke ownership of tke ground at tkat place by tke plaintiffs tkerein and asserted tke defendant’s rigkt to lay tke pipe at tkat particular place. Tkat suit, after preparation, was heard witk tke other ten suits, and upon submission tke court enjoined tke defendant, as prayed for in tke petition, and from tkat judgment it prosecutes an appeal, and in tkis court tke record in tke ten cases and tkat in tke eleventh case are considered together and will be disposed of in one opinion.

We will first dispose of tke questions presented by tke appeal in tke first ten cases. Tke record as to them, although large, presents but few questions, and none of them, according to our view, of very great difficulty. Much labor kas been saved by an agreement found in the record to tkis effect:

“It is stipulated and agreed to be true, tkat on April 27, 1838, tke date of tke deed from John W. Smith to P. Swigert, &c., trustees of tke town of Frankfort, to February 1, 1892, the date of tke deed from tke Board of Couneilmen of tke city of Frankfort to John T. Buckley, tke city of Frankfort was tke owner and in tke possession of tire Cove Springs and tke land on wkick tke same were and are situated, togetker witk its appurtenances, and wkick are located at tke head of Cedar Cove, about two miles northeast from tke city of Frankfort, including tke rigkt of way for a water pipe main therefrom to tke said city, and tke six-inch water main mentioned in these actions was laid tkerein; wkick right-of-way extended from tke reservoir enclosing said springs, westwarclly down Cedar Cove Branch through the adjoining lands now claimed by the defendants, Wil[334]*334liam Quarles and wife, to what was afterwards the land of L. Hord and wife, and now the property of Mrs. P. I. Railey, .and thence in a southwest direction through said Hord or Railey land which formerly belong-ed to Orlando Brown, Sr., known as Brown’s bottom, and through the same in the same general course to the city of Frankfort; and that said right-of-way for said pipe line, and said pipe line are the same, the right to the use of which are in question in these actions. ’ ’

Notwithstanding this stipulation, the title of the city of Frankfort to Cove Springs, the reservoir around it, and the pipe line from thence to the northern limits of the city of Frankfort is proven by evidence in the record. .It is also established by the proof that the city held that property down to February 1, 1892, when it sold all of it, consisting of about thirty-three acres of land around the springs, all of which except one acre it had acquired since 1838, to John T. Buckley,, trustee for appellant, and he, on December 28,1899, sold and deeded the property to E. H. Taylor, Jr., Company, a corporation, and it, on the 25th day of August, 1904, by deed conveyed the property to John F. Normile, and he, on the 20th day of October, 1904, conveyed it to the appellant, who has held it continuously since that time.

In the deed from the city of Frankfort to John T. Buckley, of date February 1,1892, in addition to conveying the land which the city owned around the Cove Spring and the springs themselves, there is also conveyed “such interest as it (the city) may own or possess in the water pipe upon and leading from said above described property to the end of the six-inch main; and hereby conveys, warrants and guarantees to the second party (Buckley), his heirs or assigns forever the right-of-way to and from said property and the right of entry and right-of-way for the purpose of laying, maintaining’ and repairing such water pipe and making necessary excavations for putting in new pipe from said Cove Spring property to the line of L. Hord at a point near the wooden bridge on the Frankfort & Peak’s Mill turnpike;” and also “such interest as the city may own or possess in the water pipe upon and leading from said property with guarantee to said Buckley of the right-of-way for ingress and egress, ....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 333, 175 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-t-stagg-co-v-frankfort-modes-glass-works-kyctapp-1917.