Harlan County v. Cole

292 S.W. 501, 218 Ky. 819, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 263
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 501 (Harlan County v. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlan County v. Cole, 292 S.W. 501, 218 Ky. 819, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 263 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

Reversing.

About the year 1923, the state highway commission let a contract to the Carson Construction Company to. grade and drain a five-mile section of the Pinéville to Harlan state highway. The particular section covered by the contract was between Enierling and Harlan. Under the law it was incumbent on the county of Harlan to furnish a right of way 60 feet wide. The county owned the right of way 30 feet wide, running north and south parallel with the east side of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, and fronting on a two-acre tract of land .belonging to the appellee. The two-acre tract of land belonging to appellee fronted on the highway 260 feet. The appellee and the comity of Harlan had some negotiation looking to the obtaining by the county of a 30-foot strip of land from the two-acre tract so that the right of way would be 60 feet wide. The county, so it appears from this record, without any right or authority, took the strip of land :3!0 feet wide and 260 feet long from appellee. This suit was instituted by appellee against the Carson Construction Company, which did the work on the road, J. W. Walker, described as the state road engineer, who, perhaps, represented the state in looking after the construction, and Harlan county. The suit is to recover damages for the trespass upon the property of appellee by the contractor, the engineer and the county. The case was tried in the Harlan circuit court and resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee for $1,000.00.

The Carson Construction Company was not before the court and no judgment was entered against it. Harlan county filed an answer in which it denied everything *821 alleged in the petition, even to the extent of denying that there was any such county as Harlan. Walker, whose name appears as J. B. Walker in some parts of the record and J. W. Walker in other parts, filed an answer in which he denied that appellee was the owner of the land so taken by the county and denied the trespass. He alleged that .he was the local engineer for the state highway commission and that he had no connection with the construction of the road other than to see that the road was built according to the plans and specifications. Before the beginning of the trial it was agreed that appellee was the owner of the land in question and that the county of Harlan took a strip of his- land 30 feet wide and 260 feet long. The evidence offered by appellee to support his cause of action is difficult to understand. He testified that a long ditch had been cut out of his land 30 feet wide and 260 feet long and that he had tried to fill it up. Over the objection of the county attorney he was permitted to testify as to how many cubic yards of earth and stone it would require to fill up what he denominated a ditch. He stated that it would cost at least $1.00 per cubic yard to get the dirt replaced on the roadway which had been so taken by the county. 'He was asked about the value of the land which was taken and stated that it was $1,500.00, and that he included in that amount the damage to the residue of the tract. Appellee introduced other witnesses who testified along the same lines as he testified. Some of the other witnesses undertook to say that the two acres of land belonging to appellee could be divided into good building lots, but the land is four miles from Harlan and there could not be much demand for building lots that far in the country at this time. Some of the other witnesses place, the value of the land taken, including the damage to the residue of the tracts, at $1,250.00. It is also in proof that appellee paid $2,350.00 for the two acres when he bought it a few years before the right of way was taken from him. Some of the witnesses place the damage at $260.00, that is $1.00 per front foot.

Complaint is made about the admission of evidence alleged to be incompetent, and also about the instructions given by the court. Before we can determine the availability of the complaint it is necessary to determine the nature of the suit. It was not proper for Harlan county to take this strip of land except by condemnation proceedings, or purchase, or with the consent of. appellee. The *822 county of Piarían is one of the integral parts of the state of Kentucky, and the state.should always be jealous of the rights of its citizens and should not appropriate their property in such a high-handed way. The right of way for this road has been taken by Harlan county and has been appropriated permanently to its own use. There is just one way that a county can take land for its own use and that is by making just compensation to the owner in the manner provided by law. The county being an arm of the state ordinarily it cannot be sued by a citizen for its wrongs or its dereliction of duty.

Section 242 of the Constitution gives to municipalities, which includes counties, the privilege of taking private property for public use, but requires the municipality to make just compensation for the property so taken, injured or destroyed. This compensation under this constitutional provision shall be paid before such taking, or if not paid, it must be secured. The amount of damages shall in all these cases be determined by a jury according to the course of the common law. Here we have a case where the county did not proceed in accordance with the legislative requirements to condemn property. It did not make just compensation to the owner before taking the property, and neither did it provide for the security of compensation to the owner. Can it be said that the owner is without remedy because the county wrongfully appropriated his property? We think not. The Constitution in the section before mentioned provides in part:

“The general assembly shall not deprive any person of an appeal from any preliminary assessment of damages against any such corporation or individual, made by commissioners or otherwise; and upon appeal from such preliminary assessment, the amount of such damages, shall, in all cases, be determined by a jury, according to the course of the common law:”

In this case there was no assessment of damages against the county by commissioners or otherwise. The appellee had no way to bring about such an assessment. His only remedy was the institution of a suit against the county for the value of the property so appropriated. He could not institute such a suit against the county unless the action of the county in taking the property be treated as the taking of private property for public use under *823 section 242 of the Constitution. His action, therefore, must be treated the same as if it had been an appeal from an assessment legally made in a condemnation proceeding after trial before a jury in the county court as provided by law. It follows that his case when tried in the circuit court should have been tried under the law governing such appeals.

The case of Black Mountain Corporation v. Houston, 211 Ky. 621, is conclusive of the right of appellee to maintain an action under the provisions of section 242 of the Constitution. The taking of the property under the circumstances shownjn this record was the taking of private property within the meaning of that section. The case of Letcher County v. Hogg, 209 Ky.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 501, 218 Ky. 819, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlan-county-v-cole-kyctapphigh-1927.