Humble Pipe Line Co. v. State

2 S.W.2d 1018
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1928
DocketNo. 7236. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 1018 (Humble Pipe Line Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humble Pipe Line Co. v. State, 2 S.W.2d 1018 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

The state of Texas ex rel. its Attorney General sued appellant Humble Pipe Line Company, a common carrier pipe line corporation, in the ordinary form of trespass to try title, and to temporarily enjoin, pending a final hearing of the cause, the continued laying of its pipe lines from a point on the mainland at Corpus Christi Bay, across and upon the bottoms of Red Pish Bay, Corpus Christi Bay, the tide lands adjacent thereto (except Mustang Island), and the Gulf of Mexico opposite Mustang Island, to two deep sea loading points, all within the three-mile territorial jurisdiction of the state. Appellant answered that it was a common carrier under the various pipe line statutes of' this state and its charter, with right of eminent domain to appropriate the public lands in suit across and under which to lay its pipe lines in order that it might fully and *1019 completely carry out the purposes for which it was created.

The trial court held the statutes not to authorize appellant to lay its pipe lines across and under the beds and bottoms of public bays and inlets belonging to this state or the part of the Gulf of Mexico within the jurisdiction of this state; that appellant company was therefore a naked trespasser on the tidal lands and waters in suit to the extent of the use and purposes to which it was subjecting them, and granted the temporary restraining order prayed for by the state. This appeal is from that order, and the sole question here involved in whether ,the trial court has correctly construed these pipe line statutes.

The first of these statutes was passed in 1915, and provided for the incorporation of pipe line companies, with grant of power to operate pipe lines between different .points in this state,” and with grant of other powers necessary to the purposes of such corporations. Articles 1495, 1496, R. S. 1925. In 1917, the Legislature declared pipe line companies to be common carriers, and in 1919 conferred the right of eminent domain on them and in the same years other comprehensive regulatory statutes concerning them were enacted. Articles 1497, 6018, 6020, 6022, Er S. 1925. We do not deem it necessary or proper to quote at length from these statutes, but, suffice it to say, a general summary shows them to provide: (a) That a pipe line ■corporation is a public service corporation charged with a public use, and subject to public regulation; (b) that it is a common carrier authorized to operate pipe lines “between different points in this state,” and to transport crude petroleum by pipe lines, “from any oil field or place of production within this state to any distributing, refining or marketing center or reshipping point thereof, within this state”; (c) that it has the right to own and occupy “such lands, right of way, easements, franchises, buildings and structures as may be necessary to the purposes of such corporation”; and (d) with right of eminent domain first, to appropriate “lands and property ⅜ * * of any persons or corporation * * ⅜ as may be necessary to the purposes of such corporation”; and, second, to appropriate “rights of way or easements” on private lands and properties across and under which to lay its pipe lines, and has the right to lay its pipe lines “across and under any public road or highway, street, railroad, canal, or stream, etc., in this state.”

It will be observed, with regard to the right of a pipe line corporation to lay its pipe lines across and under any public lands belonging to the state, that the statutes only expressly declare that right to exist with reference to “any public road or highway, canal, or stream,” etc., in this state. Appellant insists, however, that its right to use the tidal lands and waters in suit across and under which to lay its pipe lines does not depend upon any express statutory authority, but is based upon a reasonably necessary implication of right to use them as being necessary and proper to the execution of the power expressly granted it by the terms of the statutes, and! in order that it may fully and completely carry out the purposes for which it was created; and cites the following cases in support of that contention: Texas Central Ry. Co. v. Bowman, 97 Tex. 417, 79 S. W. 295; Ayres v. Railway, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 561, 88 S. W. 436; Imperial Irrigation Co. v. Jayne, 104 Tex. 395, 138 S. W. 575, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 322.

We have reached the conclusion that appellant’s contention is correct, and that the two rules of statutory construction recognized and established by the cases cited, supra, are applicable and control this case. These rules are, first, that the grant of express statutory power to public service corporations carries with it by “necessary implication the grant of every other power necessary and proper to -the execution of the power expressly granted” ; and second, “that a public grant for public advantages must be construed liberally,” so as to reasonably effectuate the purposes of the grant. It is true that the cases cited do not construe the-pipe line . statutes, but construe similar and analogous statutes with regard to common carrier railroad corporations and public service irrigation corporations with right of eminent domain, and, in substance, hold that statutes granting to such corporations right of eminent domain to appropriate private lands and properties necessary to the purposes of such corporations by necessary implication grant power and authority to such corporations to appropriate from the public domain, though no express authority is given by statutes to do so, such lands or waters as are “necessary and proper to the execution of the power expressly granted”; and “that a public grant for public advantages must be construed liberally” so as to effectuate the purposes of the grant. - These cases were decided long prior to the enactment of the analogous pipe line statutes, and the Legislature is presumed to have taken notice of them as a part of the law of the land when it passed the pipe line statutes. Necessarily, therefore, this judicial construction must be read into the analogous pipe line statutes.

Now, when the principles and established rules of statutory construction above announced are applied to the pipe line statutes in question, and to the express grant of powers given by them to this appellant public service pipe line corporation — charged with a public use and subject to public regulation — to operate pipe lines “between different points in this state,” and to transport as a common carrier by pipe lines crude petroleum “from any oil field or place of production within this state to any distributing, refining, or marketing center or reshipping *1020 point thereof, within this' state,” and with right of eminent domain to appropriate ordinary public and private lands as well as the expressly enumerated public lands and waters for rights of way purposes across and under which such corporation may lay its pipe lines, it becomes clear that the grant of the broad and general powers enumerated carries with it by necessary implication the grant of power and authority to such corporation to lay its pipe lines across and under the beds and bottoms of public bays, inlets, canals, or channels belonging to this state or the part of the Gulf of Mexico within the jurisdiction of this state, and to any deep sea loading or distributing or reshipping point within this state, as being reasonably necessary to carry out the purposes for which the corporation was created with the resultant good intended to the public.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humble-pipe-line-co-v-state-texapp-1928.