Irvine Toll Bridge Co. v. Estill County

275 S.W. 634, 210 Ky. 170, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 644
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 634 (Irvine Toll Bridge Co. v. Estill County) 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
Irvine Toll Bridge Co. v. Estill County, 275 S.W. 634, 210 Ky. 170, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 644 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*171 Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing on the original appeal and affirming on the cross-appeal.

A very material question in these consolidated cases and upon the solution of which depends the relevancy of many others raised and discussed, is: Whether a county in this Commonwealth, through its fiscal court, has the authority to create and sell a franchise to construct, maintain and operate a toll bridge across a navigable stream in the county? If that question is answered in the affirmative it will relieve the case, as above stated, of many other questions presented and argued. The question arises in this way: The fiscal court of Estill county in 1909 spread upon its order books by a vote of the requisite number of its members a resolution authorizing the sale of a franchise at public auction to the highest and best bidder to construct a toll bridge across Kentucky river at a point that could be used to connect the pike on either side of the river running from Irvine to Richmond, Kentucky, although at the particular point for which the franchise was granted there was no public road on either side of the river at that time. There was, however, a ferry across the river connecting the two portions of the pike located some 1,000 feet or more from the place where the bridge was to be constructed under the franchise. Pursuant to that resolution the sale of the franchise was duly advertised and the county court clerk of the county was directed to make the sale, which was done, and some individuals bought it and afterwards organized the corporation and constructed a steel bridge at a cost of about $26,000.00. The company procured strips of land from the respective abutments of the bridge connecting with each end of the pike and by appropriate orders it was turned into the bridge from both sides of the river, and from that time on it was operated under the toll charges fixed in the resolution authorizing the sale of the franchise.

In 1923 the county, conceiving that the fiscal court was -without authority to create, sell or grant the franchise, and that the charging of toll for the use of the bridge was all the while illegal and because thereof the bridge had been dedicated to the public, brought an action in the Estill circuit court seeking to enjoin the bridge company from further collecting toll for the use' of its bridge and that it be enjoined from removing the bridge *172 or interfering -with the free use thereof. Issues were made in that case, but before evidence was taken on any of them the president of the bridge company, with its attorneys, and the judge of Estill county, -with its attorney, entered into an agreement, the substance of which was ‘that the bridge company would be permitted to operate the bridge and to charge the stipulated tolls until it realized' a net sum of $16,000.00, which was the price that Estill county agreed to give for the purchase of the bridge, and after such net sum was realized the bridge would become the property of the county. In other words, the substance of that agreement was that the president of the bridge company sold to Estill county its bridge for the sum of $16,000.00, but the county did not have the money with which to pay the purchase price and agreed that the bridge company might earn it for the county by operating the bridge and thereby pay itself for its own property, which was nothing more nor less than the company paying itself for its own property from earnings by its operation and then giving its property to the county. That agreement was filed in the case and recorded as an “Agreed Judgment.” Within a comparatively short time thereafter the bridge company filed its independent petition in the Estil circuit court against the county seeking to set aside the alleged “agreed judgment” and to enjoin the county from molesting and disturbing it in the maintenance and operation of its bridge.

At or about the ‘ expiration of the time when the bridge company had earned $16,000.00 net, under the terms of the alleged agreed judgment, the county brought another action against the bridge company in the nature of an action in ejectment to recover from defendant therein (the bridge company) the possession of the bridge, which the county claimed had become its property under its contract of purchase as set forth in the alleged agreed judgment. In the meantime, certain citizens and taxpayers filed an intervening petition in the consolidated causes praying and asking for substantially the same relief as did Estill county in its original and first petition. Extensive preparations were made in the consolidated causes and upon final submission the court set aside the alleged agreed judgment in the first cause brought by Estill county, but adjudged that the fiscal court had no right to grant the bridge company a franchise and, as a consequence, the latter had- no .right to charge tolls for *173 the use of the bridge and that, notwithstanding it had done so, it was illegal, and the permission of the bridge ■company for the public to use its bridge since its completion amounted to a dedication of it to the public and enjoined it from continuing to charge tolls or from in any wise obstructing its free use by the traveling public. To reverse that judgment the bridge company prosecutes this appeal and the county has obtained in this court a cross-appeal from the judgment of the trial court setting aside the alleged agreed judgment. With this brief recitation of the history of the litigation we will now proceed to a consideration of the first question stated above, i. e., whether the Estill fiscal court was acting within its authority when it created and sold the franchise to construct a bridge with the right to charge toll for its use?

At the beginning of the discussion, it might be well to keep in mind some fundamental principles affecting the subject matters involved, among which are, that a franchise “is the privilege of doing that ‘which does not belong to the citizens of the country generally by common right;’ ” that no one inherently possesses the right to grant a franchise, except the sovereignty within which it is proposed to be exercised, but that it is competent for such sovereignty to delegate the right to grant the franchise to some or all of its municipalities as political subdivisions of the government, or perhaps it may vest such power to such agencies of government as it sees proper, and: Lastly, that the right to maintain and operate a toll bridge, especially across a navigable stream, can be done only in the exercise of a franchise legally created. We will consume neither time nor space in citing authorities in support of those general observations, since they are so firmly settled as to require none. It is equally well settled that the means by which a state may delegate its authority to grant franchises may be by a general statute (where private statutes are forbidden) or ¡by a constitutional provision, and a number of the states of the union have such provisions. With these preliminary statements we will now proceed to a consideration of the condition of our laws upon the subject.

We have been cited to no statute nor have we been able to find one expressly

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 634, 210 Ky. 170, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvine-toll-bridge-co-v-estill-county-kyctapphigh-1925.